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Does outsourcing work to third-world countries impact US employees in future?

8 points| jerawaj749 | 1 year ago

8 comments

order

bnchrch|1 year ago

The emphasis on "third-world" discounts how much of work is "translation"

And a great translation is dependant to some degree on a shared

- Language (Clear communication)

- Culture (Shared Ideas, Processes and Cohesive Habits)

- Timezone (Speed of iteration)

So as long as:

- Capital remains concentrated in the USA

- Canada remains relatively wealthy (compared to third world countries)

- South/Central America keeps their wonderful culture and language strong and vibrant.

I do not see US salaries changing in a big way due to outsourcing

(across the board anyway, though AI is a threat to some for sure)

rhelz|1 year ago

Of course. It can even vastly benefit both countries and both of their workers, e.g. Canada is better off outsourcing the growing of coffee. If each country is playing to their natural advantages, like climate, or abundance of hydroelectric power, its far more efficient and produces more for everybody.

The only problem is if one country's natural advantage is a low standard of living and poverty wages.

giantg2|1 year ago

"Canada is better off outsourcing the growing of coffee"

That's not really outsourcing. That's simply trade.

Spooky23|1 year ago

It depends on your point of view. Breaking work into pieces and contracting it out is bad for workers, as it’s cheapens labor.

It’s good for scaling up massive companies, which is good/bad depending on your pov.

meiraleal|1 year ago

Yes. It fosters economic prosperity for Americans by creating a larger global workforce that generates more value, which eventually benefits the U.S. economy and create better paying jobs for Americans.

gnz11|1 year ago

Clearly this is not true. Was this written by AI?

hiAndrewQuinn|1 year ago

Pushing the supply curve out to the right generally increases quantity supplied and decreases price. From that everything else is trivial.