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DESPITE RHETORIC, OFF-SHORING WON’T STOP

DBR | 1호 (2008년 1월)
By DINESH C. SHARMA
Reprinted with permission from YaleGlobal Online(www.yaleglobal.yale.edu)
 
Ever since taking over as U.S. president, Barack Obama has caused some nervous moments for India's gigantic outsourcing industry, which depends on American corporations for the bulk of its business. First, it was the issue of curtailing the number of H1B visas that allow foreign workers to take up employment with U.S. companies. Then came the announcement about "ending tax breaks for corporations that ship our jobs overseas" in his Feb. 24 speech to Congress.
 
So, is India's outsourcing industry in trouble? A closer look at India's information technology sector where U.S. involvement is the deepest shows it to be a storm over an Indian teacup.
 
If one examines closely what Obama is projecting as a major stride to tame the tide of off-shoring, it would appear that it's not even half a step. American firms that transfer jobs overseas or outsource work to distant locations do not get any tax break as such. They are only entitled to a concession in the U.S. tax code under which they are allowed to defer income tax payments on offshore profits until they are repatriated back home. Obama wants to eliminate this and tries to present it as a tax break, making it palatable to beleaguered Americans.
 
India reacts to this along expected lines: Some in the business and government circles call it a protectionist measure, while others feel it may not have any significant impact. In any case, the Indian outsourcing industry has been under pressure since the downturn began in U.S. financial, banking and insurance markets last year as this segment constitutes a large chunk of its business. The industry also suffered an image problem in wake of large-scale fraud unraveled in one of its star firms, Satyam, a few months ago. These two factors are bound to affect bottom lines of major Indian outsourcing firms in coming quarters.
 
But all this does not change the fundamentals of outsourcing business. Most companies outsource parts of their noncore operations to cut costs, remain competitive and offer good value to shareholders for their investments. All this becomes far more important when there is recession. Simple economics suggests that one should further cut costs when the going is bad. If American companies wish to remain afloat in these bad times, perhaps it is prudent to outsource more rather than do the reverse and add to costs. It is likely that corporations will outsource more and more of their business processes to India or elsewhere as the recession deepens.
 
Yet another reason why companies outsource is to bring new products faster to markets. This happens in two ways. By outsourcing routine functions of their businesses to offshore locations, they have the room to deploy their work force in core business areas such as getting new customers and developing new products. In some cases, they may outsource segments of the product development process also. Development of chips is a classic case of this phenomenon. In the past few years, the entire design chain of a semiconductor chip has been unbundled. This allows American chip makers and consumer electronics companies to farm out segments of chip design, fabrication and testing to different locations in the world, in order to slash development lead time and achieve faster time to market.
 
There are other reasons, too, why off-shoring makes economic sense to America. For every dollar spent on outsourcing, the U.S. economy receives $1.12 to $1.14 in return, according to estimates made by McKinsey a few years ago.
 
The American public is not aware of this magnitude of the outsourcing business. The brouhaha over job loss is mainly due to highly visible operations such as overseas call centers, where U.S. customers directly interface with foreign agents. And this is only a small part of the off-shoring pie.
 
The outsourcing business is so deep that it would be impossible to reverse the trend in a short period of time. It operates at different levels and in complex ways. Even a seemingly simple job of application software development can happen in different ways -- fully developed in India or partly onsite and partly offsite, or handled by subsidiaries of Indian companies in U.S. or in a third country where Indian companies have offshore operations. Alternatively, U.S. corporations may get the job done at their own captive units in India, China or the Philippines. It would be difficult to make out which job is getting shipped where and to whom. Some people like to call this global sourcing.
 
Similarly, the business of outsourced research and development has also grown tremendously in recent years. According to some estimates, nearly 200 Fortune-500 companies have set up R & D centers in India. These companies belong to sectors ranging from chip makers to aviation companies. Firms like General Electric have invested several hundred million dollars in large facilities that employ thousands of research workers. Such units produce substantial numbers of patents and commercial products. The intellectual property generated by these units in India belongs to parent American corporations and so they earn all the royalty earned through commercialization and related products ultimately sold in mass consumption markets like India.
 
The U.S. benefits from outsourcing in other unseen ways, including the outsourcing of talent from Asian nations like India and China. A constant flow of talent and skilled manpower comes to the U.S. in the form of students as well as trained professionals such as doctors and nurses. Most students who study tend to stay and contribute to the U.S. economy.
 
In a globalized world, the flow of people, services and jobs will follow a natural trajectory determined by market forces. Tax breaks, trade barriers, legal restrictions and political posturing play only a limited role in affecting this trend. Political pronouncements notwithstanding, the case would not be different with U.S. companies outsourcing work to India.
 
Dinesh C. Sharma is science editor of "Mail Today" and the author of "The Long Revolution: The Birth and Growth of India's IT Industry," published by HarperCollins Publishers, India.

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