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Decius
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From User: Jeremy

Current Topic: Business

What's labor going to do about offshoring?
Topic: Business 10:35 pm EST, Feb 29, 2004

The increasing move of white-collar jobs overseas is inevitable, says one longtime Silicon Valley activist. So the fight for workers' rights has to go global.

If your job has been offshored to another country, where someone else will do it for a fraction of your former salary, should you:

(a) beg;
(b) rail against the prevailing trend;
(c) get a different, less vulnerable job?

Amy Dean has a more radical, if wonkier, idea.

Dean: "The obligation of the employee is to constantly keep skills upgraded and keep really current in whatever field that you work in. It also means that the social networks that you're a part of become increasingly important, because they become the vehicle that connects you to employment."

Salon: What do you think that Silicon Valley will be like 20 years from now?

Dean: "The economy will become increasingly hollow. ... There will be people who are working on the very top end of innovation, and there will be people servicing them, with very little in between."

Decius: I have this ingrained distrust for unions. I used to be in one, until I found out that the money I was paying into it was being used to fuck me in Congress on Social Security. The majority of the people in said union were under the age of 30, but the union was primarily responsive to the interests of people over 50. What this amounted to was that I was "collectively bargaining" with a bunch of people who had no idea what the hell to bargain for, and let others worry about figuring that out. Apathy is its own reward.

However, I strongly agree that our society needs to seriously revamp the social structures around the 40 hour work week. Our health insurance, our taxes, our pensions, our labor laws... basically everything typically handled by an HR department is structured around the idea that you work for one company and you do it for 40 hours a week. There is no room for flexibility, for employee or employer.

I spent some time working for RHIC. I really like them. They are very professional. They do offer pensions and insurance for their consultants. They are a stab at the problem. But the legislation doesn't support their model. Insurance is only available if you are doing so much work with them that you pretty much look like a full timer on paper. Furthermore, they have a model which is so decentralized that it actually has a negative impact on geographic flexibility. They had no ability to transfer me to another office in an area where my skills were more in demand. Different RHIC city offices are totally autonomous. They are like different companies.

I want more flexibility. My employer wants more flexibility. So whose holding up the show here?

What's labor going to do about offshoring?


Education Is No Protection
Topic: Business 12:58 pm EST, Feb  1, 2004

"These companies understand very clearly that this is a very painful process for their employees and for American jobs in the short term. But they also recognize that if they don't do this, they will lose more jobs in the future and they won't have an ability to grow in the future."

"Companies can still form in Silicon Valley and be competitive around the world. It's just that they are not going to create jobs in Silicon Valley."

... an entire generation of lowered expectations ...

This author doesn't understand why we are ignoring the problem. If you look two articles back in my MemeStream to "Creative Class War" you'll get the why to go along with this article's what.

Education Is No Protection


The Wal-Martization of America
Topic: Business 5:01 pm EST, Nov 15, 2003

The 70,000 grocery workers on strike in Southern California are the front line in a battle to prevent middle-class service jobs from turning into poverty-level ones.

The supermarkets say they are forced to lower their labor costs to compete with Wal-Mart, a nonunion, low-wage employer aggressively moving into the grocery business.

Everyone should be concerned about this fight.

NYT weighs in on one of two ongoing labor disputes in southern California.

The Wal-Martization of America


Harvard Business Review - August 2003
Topic: Business 10:42 am EDT, Aug 29, 2003

From an article in the August 2003 issue of Harvard Business Review:

In the technology industry, breakthrough products and services rarely come about as a result of asking customers what they want. Customers are notoriously unable to envision what doesn't exist. Instead, successful companies divine the needs of their customers by probing at the underlying problems and transferring that understanding to the innovation process.

Harvard Business Review - August 2003


Business 2.0 - Magazine Article - Printable Version - The Technology Secrets of Cocaine Inc.
Topic: Business 2:40 pm EDT, Aug  7, 2002

Colombian cartels have spent billions of dollars to build one of the world's most sophisticated IT infrastructures. It's helping them smuggle more dope than ever before.

... High-tech has become the drug lords' most effective counter-weapon in the war on drugs -- and is a major reason that cocaine shipments to the United States from Colombia hit an estimated 450 tons last year, almost twice the level of 1998.

... "If they want it, they buy it." ... Recently, the cartels have built their own submarines.

... The mainframe was loaded with custom-written data-mining software.

... Cartel leaders have sent members of their own families to top US schools. The talent and tools are among the best that money can buy.

I've discussed this issue before, and here is a recent article that explains why keeping certain research results out of _Science_ and _Nature_ is not a very effective defense strategy.

If the cartels can spend billions on IT, they can surely do a little biotech on the side. They can use the results to improve their products, and they can also license the technology to others who may lack the necessary research infrastructure.

Business 2.0 - Magazine Article - Printable Version - The Technology Secrets of Cocaine Inc.


 
 
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