I should have known better than to get sucked into this one. I find it heartbreaking but I care too intensely to look away I'm afraid.
TME said:
Hey, I just noticed that KootK doesn't have his usual signature any more. Gave up warning people in advance KootK?
Yeah. As you know, the way that I go about things here tends to get me mired in a lot of conflict. Contrary to popular opinion, I don't actually enjoy that for its own sake. I'm a stereotypical Canuck in that regard. It's just the only way that I know of to get smart people to stick with me to resolution on complex issues. I'd hoped that the signature would tamp the emotionally charged situations down some but that's not been my experience at all. Since the signature didn't seem to be accomplishing anything, I came to see it as just thread clutter that would be better eliminated.
WARose said:
What is going on is destroying our profession.
I don't disagree. To simply add to the pool of shared meaning on this, I submit the following:
1) I can only think of two ways to deal with this. One is protectionism and the other is the peer review scheme that I described above. Otherwise, I think that we in the host marketplaces simply have to accept that our graduate degrees etc were poor financial investments as they do not garner much value in a global marketplace.
2) One of the few ways in which I am "Trump-ist" is that I'm am all in favor of protectionism for host markets like the US. I think that globalism really and truly is a bust for a country like the US that effectively IS the market that it itself wishes to serve. Access to such a market is the golden goose of economics. Why you'd want to share it with a world with whom you can't compete price wise is baffling to me. Locker 'er up and keep everybody out I say, even poor KootK. It's unfair and inefficient in a global sense but, seriously, does anybody in the host marketplaces really
want their standard of living averaged with that of the rest of the world? I sure don't.
3) I know of at least two top tier US firms that are outsourcing the majority of their design work and effectively giving away design for free in exchange for procuring the special inspection work that has to be done locally. My dream profession as a loss leader. In a global marketplace, you want to be damn sure that your bread and butter isn't really great two-way slab design for condos using SAFE.
4) Through some recent forensic work, I've come into direct contact with some outsourced structural engineering. The engineering work was bad to the point of being dangerous and criminal. And this was a systemic thing involving many projects, not just a one off. I am not implying that all "foreign engineers" are doing bad work. I myself am a foreign engineer much of the time. That said, we would not be discussing the truth here if we didn't acknowledge that the quality of outsourced engineering work tends to be poorer than locally executed engineering work on average. That, particularly, since quality may be a legitimate basis upon which local engineers can compete if the benefits of that quality can be demonstrated.
5) Through my experiences here on Eng-Tips, my concern for the quality of outsourced work has only grown. Taken as an average not representing the capabilities of any one individual, it is my impression that a lot of very eyebrow raising questions tend to come disproportionately from members in developing markets. Moreover, members from developing markets seem to be suffering massively from a lack of quality mentoring. I can't help but wonder if the guys who should be mentoring such engineers from the cube down the hall are really located Pittsburgh, not doing any effective mentoring at all. In this sense, outsourcing may well be doing some harm to the remote engineering community as well.