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John H wrote:
That's the attitude! Give our kids even *more* reason to search for the easiest way to get a worthless degree. The education problem was here before outsourcing. Outsourcing is one of the effects of our education problem. -- ****************** If we turned out as many or more engineers as do the Chinese and the Indians (countries with several times our population and probably not producing that many more engineers per capita) the corporations would *still* look around and say: "We can pay an American graduate, living in the United States, a starting wage of $1000 a week, plus another $1000 a month in FICA and fringe benefits, and have that graduate make design computations on a software program. Or, we can pay and Indian graduate, living in New Delhi, $125 a week to do the same job and not worry about the fringe benefits, etc, because the government provides for the sick and the elderly in India. The Indian graduate will work at least as hard for the $125 a week, be more grateful to get it, be able to buy an equally luxurious lifestyle, and when he qualifies for a 10% pay increase after a year it will cost us $12 a week instead of another $100." Even Bill Gates, who is loudly wailing about the loss of high tech jobs to third world countries and is blaming the shift on "poor education", is laying off some of the most highly educated workers in the world here in the US to export jobs as fast as he can to a market where his labor costs are about 20% of what they are here in the US. You want to train the younger generation for the jobs of tomorrow? Forget anything that can be done on computer with the results shot anywhere around the world via the internet. The best paid new jobs will be in sales and marketing, construction, mechanical repair, home remodel, travel and entertainment. Medical professions are safe. Anything that requires the physical presence of a skilled human being, on site, rather than several thousand miles away in a socialist, third world economy. It's a paradigm shift, yet again. Our generation was well compensated for what we *knew*, but knowledge is portable and you can educate people who are willing to work and who can afford to work for substantially less than even poverty-level wages in the US. Our kids will be paid less for what they know and more for what they can *do*, and the less exportable the skill set and the greater the requirement that somebody be physically located where the services are performed the more the job is likely to pay. |
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