Bagian ke-7 dar survey The Economist.  

Salam,
RM   
  
-----------------------
  
 
Sink or Schwinn

Nov 11th 2004 
>From The Economist print edition

 
Sourcing from low-cost countries works only in open
and flexible labour markets. Europe's are neither 

WHEN Hal Sirkin was growing up in 1960s America, the
bicycle that every regular American child wanted was a
Schwinn. In 1993, Schwinn filed for bankruptcy. The
firm had been overtaken by imported Chinese bicycles.
In 2001, a company called Pacific Cycle bought the
Schwinn brand out of bankruptcy. Pacific Cycle, now
owned by a Canadian consumer-goods firm called Dorel
Industries, says the secret of its success is
“combining its powerful brand portfolio with low-cost
Far East sourcing.” Schwinn bicycles now line the
aisles at Wal-Mart.

Mr Sirkin is a consultant with the Boston Consulting
Group who helps his customers do what Pacific Cycle
has done to Schwinn: move production to East Asia,
especially to China. Wal-Mart buys $15 billion-worth
of Chinese-made goods every year. Obtaining goods and
services from low-cost countries helps to build
strong, growing companies, such as Dorel Industries,
and healthy economies. But the Schwinn story also
contains the opposite lesson: failing to buy in this
way can seriously damage a company's health.


Sourcing from low-cost countries brings many economic
benefits. Cheaper labour brings down production costs.
This keeps companies competitive, raises profits and
reduces prices as firms pass their lower costs on to
their customers. Higher profits and lower prices lift
demand and keep inflation in check. Companies spend
their profits on improving existing products or
introducing new ones. Customers buy more of the things
they already consume, or spend the money on new goods
and services. This stimulates innovation and creates
new jobs to replace those that have gone abroad. 

Moving work abroad may also help to speed up
innovation directly, as American, European and
Japanese companies get some of their R&D done by
Chinese, Russian or Indian engineers. Randy Battat,
the boss of Airvana, a telecoms-equipment start-up,
has spent the past 18 months setting up an R&D centre
for his company in Bangalore. This will complement the
work of Mr Battat's engineers in Chelmsford,
Massachusetts. The ones working in America will
develop the next generation of the company's
technology. The Bangalore centre will elaborate
Airvana's existing technology. “They are adding bells
and whistles that could not be added otherwise because
it would not be cost-effective,” says Mr Battat.

By making IT more affordable, sourcing from cheaper
countries also spreads the productivity-enhancing
effects of such technology more widely through the
economy. Ms Mann of the Institute for International
Economics calculates that globalised production and
international trade has made IT hardware 10-30%
cheaper than it would otherwise have been. She reckons
that this price reduction created a cumulative $230
billion-worth of additional GDP in America between
1995 and 2002 as more widespread adoption of IT raised
productivity growth. Sourcing IT services (which
account for 70% of overall corporate spending on IT)
from countries such as India will create a “second
wave of productivity growth”, predicts Ms Mann, as
cheaper IT spreads to parts of the economy that have
so far bought less of it, such as the health-care
industry and smaller companies.

McKinsey calculates that for every dollar American
firms spend on service work from India, the American
economy receives $1.14 in return. This calculation
depends in large part on the ability of America's
economy to create new jobs for displaced workers.
America's labour market is a miracle of flexibility:
it creates and destroys nearly 30m jobs a year. 

However, in countries such as Germany, France and
Japan a combination of social legislation, stronger
trade unions, regulations and corporate-governance
arrangements make employment practices more rigid and
sometimes keep wages higher than they would otherwise
be. This reduces demand for labour and pushes
unemployment higher. According to McKinsey, in
Germany, the re-employment rate for IT and service
workers displaced by sourcing from low-cost countries
may be only 40%. As unemployment at home rises, that
process could actually make Germans poorer (see chart
7).



Reluctant Europeans
Udo Jung of the Boston Consulting Group says that, by
and large, Germans accept that manufacturing companies
such as Hella, Bosch and Siemens must get supplies
from China. Degussa, a chemicals manufacturer,
recently invited its workers' council on a trip to
China. The idea was to take emotion out of the debate,
says Mr Jung. Nor do continental Europeans seem
bothered about white-collar work being done in
low-cost countries. But that may be because they are
doing so little of it. 

At present, perhaps 80-90% of the service work being
done remotely in India comes from either America or
Britain, with which the country has linguistic and
cultural links. Such links are absent from its
relationship with Germany or France. Germany, like
America, introduced a special visa programme for
Indian IT workers in the 1990s as its domestic supply
of engineers ran dry. But most Indians that went to
work in Germany failed to learn the language and came
back again, says Infosys's Mr Murthy. The opposite is
true of Indians in America. Those who have gone there
to work or study are often reluctant to return home to
their families.

 
 
 

 
Cultural ties appear to be important in forming
business relationships in remote-service work, says
Rajendra Bandri of the Indian Institute of Management
in Bangalore. Mr Bandri has studied five examples of
European firms outsourcing white-collar work to Sri
Lanka. In each case, they chose that country because a
well-placed Sri Lankan worked for the European firm,
says Mr Bandri. 

Eastern Europe and Russia, which brim over with
skilled, underemployed engineers, present fewer
cultural barriers for European companies. French is
spoken in Russia, German in Hungary and elsewhere. Yet
neither German nor French firms have yet shown much
appetite for buying services work from their
neighbours, either. Arkadiy Dobkin, the boss of Epam,
which claims to be the largest supplier of IT services
from eastern Europe and Russia, is based in Princeton,
New Jersey, rather than in Paris or Berlin.



Beyond economics
A survey of 500 European firms last summer by IDC, a
research firm, found that only 11% of its sample were
sourcing IT work from low-cost countries, and that
nearly 80% would not even consider doing so. Attitudes
were hardest in Italy, where 90% of firms were against
the idea, followed by France and Germany. An American
study released at the same time by Edward Perlin
Associates, a consulting firm, found that around 60%
of the companies it surveyed had some of their IT work
done in low-cost countries.

In continental Europe, companies may outsource for
reasons that have little to do with favourable
economics, says Francis Delacourt, the head of
outsourcing at Atos Origin. In what he describes as
“social outsourcing”, firms such as Atos Origin may
take on surplus IT employees from companies that no
longer need them. Europe-wide social legislation
requires the new employer to provide the same wages
and benefits as the old one. The alternative is costly
redundancy. Mr Delacourt says this works for his
company, up to a point, because demand for IT workers
in Europe is growing, and Atos Origin has found ways
to re-employ such people profitably. But he concedes
that his company needs to be careful not to take on
too many.

How well this system stands up to competition from
India is anybody's guess. A manager at one firm in
Europe privately muses that Germany, France and other
countries might introduce barriers to IT imports to
counter the threat to their domestic employment. If
McKinsey is right and sourcing from abroad does make
unemployment in Germany and elsewhere worse,
protectionist sentiment will grow.

In the end, Europe's big service firms are likely to
get round to sourcing production from abroad, as its
manufacturing companies have already done. But by that
time, says Andrew Parker of Forrester, British and
American companies will already have developed much
stronger ties with India and other cheap countries,
and costs will have risen. This will especially hurt
Europe's big financial firms: the biggest banks spend
billions of dollars a year on IT. Mr Parker speculates
that some European financial firms could be so badly
damaged by this loss of competitiveness that they may
fall into the arms of fitter American and British
rivals. Schwinn could tell them all about it. 



 
 


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