-Caveat Lector-

Deconstructing America
"...The U.S. gave away its agricultural knowledge, its education, its
technology, its manufacturing jobs and is now giving away its IT jobs. The
displaced manufacturing workers did not move to the promised greener
pastures. What reason is there to believe that the displaced engineers,
Wall Street analysts, accountants, scientists, and other knowledge workers
will do any better when their careers are outsourced?..."
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Paul Craig Roberts

Palo Alto, CA - Do you remember those Information Technology (IT) jobs that
were going to take the place in the "new economy" of those outsourced
manufacturing jobs? Don't bother to retrain. The IT jobs are leaving, too.

Knowledge work can be done anywhere there are educated people. These days
that's just about everywhere: the Philippines, India, China, Russia,
Eastern Europe, Costa Rica, and South Africa. Outsourcing of "new economy"
jobs is exploding.

A recent article in the Feb. 3 Business Week describes "dazzling new
technology parks" on the outskirts of India's major cities where U.S.
companies such as Bank of America, Texas Instruments, pharmaceutical
companies, Intel, Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Hewlet Packard, American
Express, Dell Computer, Eastman Kodak, IBM, GE, Microsoft, Procter &
Gamble, Fluor Corp, Electronic Data Services, Citibank, Boeing, mortgage
lenders,  Massachusetts General Hospital, and even architectural firms hire
Indians to do knowledge jobs that Americans did three years ago.

In Bangalore, Indian radiologists interpret CT scans for Massachusetts
General Hospital, and Indian engineers design third-generation mobile-phone
chips for Texas Instruments. Other Indians process claims for major U.S.
insurance companies and home loans for U.S. mortgage companies. Indian
molecular biologists conduct research for pharmaceutical companies. Indians
analyze financial data for Wall Street, conduct R&D for U.S. high-tech
companies, and design software for Microsoft.

The competition for U.S. knowledge workers is tough. India has 520,000 IT
engineers, and starting salaries are $5,000. Five years from now, Indian
service exports will add $57 billion annually to the U.S. and European
trade deficits, and 4 million IT jobs will have been moved to India. The
same thing is happening in China, a country with which the U.S. is expected
to have a $125 billion trade deficit this year due largely to outsourcing.
Microsoft alone is spending $1.15 billion for R&D and outsourcing in India
and China over the next three years. In Microsoft's Beijing research
facility, one-third of the Chinese programmers have Ph.D.s from U.S.
universities at U.S. taxpayers' expense.

Filipinos prepare Procter & Gamble's tax returns and crunch numbers for
audits conducted by U.S. accounting firms. Architectural work ranging from
home design to multibillion-dollar petrochemical plants is outsourced to
Hungary, India, and the Philippines.

The U.S. gave away its agricultural knowledge, its education, its
technology, its manufacturing jobs and is now giving away its IT jobs. The
displaced manufacturing workers did not move to the promised greener
pastures. What reason is there to believe that the displaced engineers,
Wall Street analysts, accountants, scientists, and other knowledge workers
will do any better when their careers are outsourced?

Business Week asked Harvard University globalist advocate Robert Lawrence
what happens if America loses its knowledge jobs on top of its
manufacturing jobs. His answer was not reassuring. He has no evidence -
just faith - that globalization will make us better off.

What is going on when American policymakers and elites gamble with the
livelihoods of tens of millions of Americans on faith? Business Week is
correct when it says "economists haven't begun to fathom the implications"
for America of globalization. But it is already obvious who the winners and
losers are.

The winners are the foreigners with IT educations who live in countries
where both the standard and cost of living are very low. The losers are IT
employees in the U.S. where both the standard and cost of living is very
high. Filipino engineers working for American firms at salaries of $3,000
annually, and Chinese and Indians working for $5,000 to $10,000 annually
are unbeatable competition. For American university students struggling to
prepare for high-tech careers, the good times are over before they begin.

While jobs leave America and incomes fall, the eligibility of illegal
aliens for U.S. Social Security and Medicaid benefits is a powerful magnet
pulling in poor foreigners by the droves. The 1996 Welfare Reform Act did
not end benefits for PRUCOL aliens, those who entered illegally and
"permanently reside under color of law." People collect benefits who have
never paid in. And it is American citizens, downsized and outsourced, who
are saddled with the burden.

As most everyone knows, Social Security is in dire straits. But its funding
problem has not deterred the Bush administration from drafting a treaty
with Mexico that will give the Mexican government $345 billion in Social
Security payments for Mexicans who have worked legally and illegally in the
U.S.

Let's hope the Bush administration is correct and that we are not starting
a 30-year war in the Middle East by invading Iraq. Otherwise, the
combination of war, job and income loss, unprecedented trade deficits, and
the creation of Social Security entitlements for foreign nationals will
break the U.S. long before another generation passes.

Before the U.S. can reconstruct the world, it must cease deconstructing
itself. For that task, the country will need a champion.


  Paul Craig Roberts is a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution,
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, and research
fellow at the Independent Institute. A former editor and columnist for the
Wall Street Journal and nationally syndicated columnist and a columnist for
BusinessWeek magazine. He was Distinguished Fellow at the Cato Institute
during 1993-96. In 1987, the French government recognized him as "the
artisan of a renewal in economic science and policy after half a century of
state interventionism" and inducted him into the Legion of Honor. See also:
Paul Craig Roberts





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