Quote from Covertibility:
How about before the idiot politicians sign off on CAFTA or any of these outsourcing deals and claiming that it is beneficial to the economy, they see job replacement in queue for those jobs that are to be outsourced. Otherwise, unemployment extensions should persist as a result of failed planning.
The structural employment problem is largely a result of conservative economists who don't bother with the real world as it conflicts with their imaginary fairy tales dreamt up in their textbooks.
With all the outsourcing to China and India, can anyone name any company that has recipricated jobs from either country to the US? Textbook says reciprocation should have happened.
That's the lump of labour fallacy. There are always more jobs available than their are people available to work, it's simply a matter of what price those jobs are offered at. Outsourcing lowers wages temporarily but those lower wages result in higher profits for corporations which have to go back into the economy, which they do in the form of greater business spending and investment, which in turn creates more jobs again. If outsourcing is profitable (and if it wasn't, no one would do it), then for each $1 worth that goes out, more than $1 is saved, and thus companies have *more* money to spend and invest than they did before, and thus will on balance hire *more* employees (or the same number but higher wages). Outsourcing therefore increases employment and/or wages for domestic employees, the exact opposite of what its opponents claim.
The argument against outsourcing is exactly the same as the argument against technological progress. People used to destroy weaving looms because they allegedly "destroyed jobs". If it was true that each efficiency-improving piece of technology destroyed jobs, then by now after 200 years of technological progress since the industrial revolution, the west would have 90%+ unemployment. Whereas in fact it has no more unemployment over the cycle than it did 200 years ago. Thus, technology - or anything else which improves profits and efficiency of production by replacing cost-ineffective jobs - does not increase unemployment over the long-run.
You are committing a basic economic error, looking at what is seen (the loss of the job to a cheaper outsourced alternative) and ignoring what is not seen (the increased efficiency of production and thus higher profits, which must get reinvested and thus leader to *more* or *higher paid* jobs). Considering both the unseen as well as the seen consequences, outsourcing - just like technology - improves wages, living standards, corporate profits, and productivity in the delivery of goods and services.
So, you should only be against outsourcing if you want lower wages, lower living standards, less profitable companies, and less output per man hour worked or dollar invested. I.e. if you want to return the world to the dark ages.