Lew wrote:I can hire an Indian programmer in Chennai to do for $20/hr, what I have to pay a US based person $80/hr to do.
But you're really spending $100/hr or more toemploy that person in the States. His pay check might say $80/hr, then add what you spend on benifits and employment taxes (FICA, unemployment)
LV wrote:A third of the productivity if you're lucky. Then you have to pay someone on this side to sort though the mess they've created (been there, done that...).
I can show you a lot of U.S. based "programmers" that you would have the same problems with. There are good and bad people all over the world. The trick is finding the good ones wherever yopu are looking.
Some automotive engineering firms have now decided that it costs the same or MORE to send work to India as to have it done here, but they loose tax benifits if they don't.
What a crock. What "benifits"? That like saying I would loose "tax benifits" if I mover to CA instead of staying in MS (MS income tax is 5% max). Finding a way to pay lower taxes is not getting a benifit, it just geting the best deal you can out of a broken system.
BTW, those"benifits" apply to London, Frankfurt, and Paris the same as they do in Dubai or Seoul.
The only jobs left will be at Wal-Mart. I call dibs on the greeter gig...
Thomas Sowell wrote:Immigration has joined the long list of subjects on which it is taboo to talk sense in plain English. At the heart of much confusion about immigration is the notion that we ’need’ immigrants—legal or illegal—to do work that Americans won’t do. What we ’need’ depends on what it costs and what we are willing to pay. If I were a billionaire, I might ’need’ my own private jet. But I can remember a time when my family didn’t even ’need’ electricity. Leaving prices out of the picture is probably the source of more fallacies in economics than any other single misconception. At current wages for lowlevel jobs and current levels of welfare, there are indeed many jobs that Americans will not take. The fact that immigrants—and especially illegal immigrants—will take those
jobs is the very reason the wage levels will not rise enough to attract Americans. This is
not rocket science. It is elementary supply and demand. Yet we continue to hear about
the ’need’ for immigrants to do jobs that Americans will not do—even though these
are all jobs that Americans have done for generations before mass illegal immigration
became a way of life.
A similar argument applies to foreign jobs. If a lower cost way exists, it will be used by a business if they wish to stay in business. If it's not less expensive, then it won't be used. In many cases, experiment with forigne employment have not been cheaper, and thus are no longer used. Like customer support call centers. The loss of business due to poor support is bringing the call centers back o the States.