Judging from the buzz, or lack of it, it appears that the rhetoric against offshoring has faded somewhat and especially the technology sector seems to have come to terms with the practice. However if one pays close attention it is not hard to notice that there still is quite a bit of resentment – so much so that a lot of businesses try to conceal from their customers the fact that they utilize offshore resources!
A shortsighted Lou Dobbs’ type analysis would conclude that offshoring is hurting the American people – high paying jobs are moving overseas at a fast pace and the Americans are getting the short end of the stick! The people who conduct such analysis are strong advocates of protectionism as the remedy – they want the government to intervene and close the gates to offshoring. While to many programmers and people from other professions who have lost their jobs to their offshore equivalents this may sound great, in the long term such policy would have devastating consequences.
Let’s rewind a few decades and draw a parallel (albeit not a perfect one) with the time when the government intervened to protect the once flourishing auto industry by restricting the imports of the foreign cars to the country. In the short term that was great for the American auto industry and consequently for the armada of people that the industry employed – our great auto companies continued to prosper un-challenged. That is exactly what set them up for the huge catastrophic failure that we have been “watching” unfold in the last few years. By shielding them from the competition in essence the government ensured that they would gradually turn into impaired, intellectually challenged, slow reacting, bureaucratic organizations incapable of competing in the open market. How would that have played if the auto industry was left to face the challenge on its own without government help? I am sure there would have been some “bruising” but the American ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit would have certainly emerged victorious from the “battle” and we would all be now driving reliable, safe, comfortable, elegant, and highly efficient, American made cars.
Is it painful when the lower cost of the overseas resources puts downward pressure on the compensation of American employees or even worst when an American employee’s job moves offshore? Yes, it is very painful but it is a pain we have to endure for the sake of the long term survival. The government intervention would be like delaying an urgent and absolutely necessary surgery for a patient and giving him painkillers instead. At some point the painkillers loose their power and the patient is in great pain but unfortunately at that point it is too late for surgery…
It must be understood that this phase we are going through is not a common, normal phase – the World has moved somewhat abruptly from a World of multiple closed National Economies with some level of strictly controlled exchange between each other into an open market / global economy that is currently undergoing the greatest transition it has ever seen. It is like having some 200 separate bodies of water all at different levels and each of them connected to each of the other ones through a highly complex system of locks – if all of the sudden all the lock gates were open one can only imagine the kind of havoc that event would wreak, but eventually a new equilibrium state will be reached and things will be peaceful and normal once again although completely different. Until the water settles all we citizens of the World (not just we Americans) will have to learn to swim on those water currents.
Feel free to leave your comments here whether you agree or not and if you are a programmer or a database administrator and work with SQL Server please don’t forget to check out our great SQL Server tools here: http://www.xsql.com/ and read about our “pay if you can” licensing here: http://xsqlsoftware.blogspot.com/2008/04/unique-hassle-free-software-licensing.html.
Showing posts with label offshore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label offshore. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
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