February 14, 2005
The Great American Job Sellout
By Paul Craig Roberts
Americans are being sold out on the
jobs front. Americans’ employment opportunities are
declining as a result of corporate outsourcing of US
jobs, H-1B visas that import foreigners to
displace Americans in their own country, and federal
guest worker programs.
President Bush and his
Republican majority intend to
legalize the aliens who hold down wages for
construction companies and
cleaning services. In order to stretch budgets,
state and local governments bring in lower paid
foreign nurses and school teachers. To reduce costs,
US corporations outsource jobs abroad and use work visa
programs to import foreign engineers and programmers.
The American job giveaway is explained by a "shortage"
of Americans to take the jobs.
There are not too many Americans
willing to accept the pay and working conditions of
migrant farm workers. However, the US is bursting at
the seams with unemployed computer engineers and
well-educated professionals who are displaced by
outsourcing and
H-1B visas. During Bush’s entire first term, there
was a net loss of American private sector jobs. Today
there are 760,000 fewer private sector jobs in the US
economy than when Bush was first inaugurated in January
2001.
For years the hallmark of the
European economy was its inability to create any jobs
other than government jobs. America has caught up with
Europe. During Bush’s first term, state and local
government created 879,000 new government jobs.
Offsetting these government jobs against the net loss in
private sector jobs gives Bush a four-year jobs
growth of 119,000 government jobs. Comparing this
pathetic result to normal performance produces a
shortage of 8 million US jobs. What happened to these
jobs?
Over these same four years the
composition of US jobs has changed from higher-paid
manufacturing and information technology jobs to
lower-paid domestic services. Why?
During this extraordinary breakdown
in the American employment machine, politicians,
government officials, corporate spokespersons, and
"free trade" economists
gave assurances that America was benefitting
greatly from the work visa programs and outsourcing.
The mindless chatter continues.
Just the other day Ambassador David Gross, US
Coordinator for International Communications and
Information Policy in the State Department,
declared outsourcing to be an economic efficiency
that
works to America’s benefit. There is no sign of this
alleged benefit in US jobs statistics or the US balance
of trade.
Repeatedly and incorrectly, US
corporations state that outsourcing creates more US
jobs. They even convinced a
New York Times columnist
that this was the case.
The problem is, no one can identify
where the US jobs are that outsourcing allegedly
creates. They are certainly not to be found in the
BLS jobs statistics. However, the Indian and Chinese
jobs created by US outsourcing are highly visible.
On February 13, the Dayton
(Ohio) Daily News reported that jobs outsourcing is
transforming Indian "cities like Bangalore from
sleepy little backwaters into the New York Cities of
Asia." In a very short period outsourcing has helped
to raise India from one of the world’s poorest countries
to its seventh largest economy.
Outsourcing proponents claim that
US job loss is being exaggerated, that outsourcing is
really just a small thing involving a few call centers.
If that is the case, how is it transforming sleepy
Indian cities into "the New York Cities of Asia"?
If outsourcing is no big deal, why are Bangalore hotel
rooms
"packed with foreigners paying rates higher than in
Tokyo or London," as the Dayton Daily News
reports?
If outsourcing is of no real
consequence, why are American lawyers or their clients
paying $2,900 in fees plus hotel and travel expenses and
two days’ billings to attend the
Fourth National Conference on Outsourcing in Financial
Services in Washington DC (April 20-21)?
On the jobs front, as on the war
front, the social security front and every other front,
Americans are not being given the truth. Americans’ news
comes from people allied with the Bush administration or
dependent on revenues from corporate advertisers.
Displease the government or advertisers and your media
empire is in trouble. The news most Americans get is
filtered. It is the permitted news. Many
"free trade" advocates also are dependent on the
corporate money that funds their salaries, research and
think tanks.
Another clear indication that
outsourcing of US jobs is no small thing comes from the
reported earnings of the leading
Indian corporations that provide American firms with
outsourced IT employees and engineers. During the recent
quarter, Infosys’ revenues increased by 53%, TCS grew by
38%, and Wipro was up 34%.
On January 1, 2001,
Cincinnati-based Convergys Corp had one Indian employee.
Today it has 10,000. Why? Because it can hire Indian
university graduates for $240 a month, a sum that is a
small fraction of the US poverty level income.
Many Americans think that an
outsourced job is an existing job that is moved
offshore. But many outsourced jobs are created offshore
in the first place. On February 11, USA Today
told the story
of
OfficeTiger, "the sort of young technology
company that once created thousands of high-paying jobs
in the USA, fueling sizzling economic growth." The
five-year old startup business employs 200 Americans and
ten times that number of Indians. The company has plans
for hiring many more Indians to perform "tech-heavy
financial services."
Under pressure from venture
capitalists who fund new companies, American startup
firms are starting up abroad. Thus, the new ventures,
which "free trade" economists assured us would
create new jobs to take the place of the ones moved
offshore by mature firms, are in fact creating jobs for
foreigners.
As a consequence, tech jobs in the
US are falling as a percentage of the total. Clearly,
tax breaks for venture capitalists are self-defeating
when the result is to create jobs for foreigners, not
for Americans. Why should the American taxpayer
subsidize employment in India and China?
These developments have obvious
adverse implications for engineering and professional
education in America. The BLS jobs forecast for the next
ten years says the vast majority of US jobs will not
require a college education. University enrollments will
decline and so will the production of PhDs as fewer
professors are needed.
As India and China rise to first
world status, the US falls to third world status where
the only jobs are in domestic services.
This has enormous implications for
the US balance of payments. Americans’ consumption of
manufactured goods is heavily dependent on foreign
manufacture, whether that of foreign firms or that of US
multinational firms that supply their American customers
from offshore. How does an economy in which employment
growth is concentrated in nontradable domestic services
pay for its imports with exports?
Since 1990 the US has been paying
for its imports by giving foreigners ownership of its
assets. In the last 15 years foreigners have accumulated
$3.6 trillion of America’s wealth.
America has been able to pay for
its consumption by giving up its wealth because the
dollar is the world’s reserve currency. As America’s
high-tech and manufacturing capabilities decline and its
red ink rises, the dollar’s role as reserve currency
must end.
When the dollar loses its reserve
currency role, America will not be able to pay for the
imports on which it has become dependent. Shopping in
Wal-Mart will be like shopping at
Neiman Marcus.
Until recent years, US companies
employed Americans to produce the goods that Americans
consumed. Employment supported sales, and sales
supported employment. No more. By their shortsighted
policy of moving US jobs abroad, our corporations are
destroying their American markets.
Economists give assurances that the
dollar’s decline and fall will bring jobs and industry
back to the US. Once Americans are as poor as
Indians and Chinese are today, the process will
reverse. Multinational corporations will locate in
America to take advantage of cheap labor and unserved
markets. By becoming poor, the US can become rich again.
You might want to ask the
economists and our "leaders" in Washington why we
should put ourselves and our descendants through such a
wrenching process.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good
Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are
Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.