No one is to blame.
It's a fact of life. If you have an economy shaped a certain way then outsourcing is one of the consequences.
There are things politicians can do but probably won't and, frankly, it's probably better they don't tinker with something they don't understand. Who does? No two economists ever agree on anything so what is the right and wrong? We should accept the situation and look instead at how we deal with the consequences.
Outsourcing puts cheap goods on the table. It drives sales and sales make the world go round.
I would suggest that our economic ills lately have little to do with outsourcing which is a slow process and one to which the economies of nations can adjust naturally, and more to do with 9/11 and OPEC.
I'm not connecting these two, just saying, 9/11 and OPEC both have an immediate and dramatic effects on global enconomies.
OPEC is a legitimised example of what is not tolerated in any other area of business; price fixing. At the moment oil prices are very high. For some sectors of the economy this is good, for others bad.
The problem is how to plan any kind of strategy when overnight, these guys can push the price of oil through the ceiling or through the floor.
Outsourcing is a consequence of longer term economic effects that can, like many things, be measured and predicted, within reason. Actually it is a beneficial means toward redressing the imbalances of our gobal community, along with other things, and we have discussed this before.
The main problem without outsourcing, or any other problem, is response. Trying to put the clock back or stop the waves rolling in is a waste of time and effort.
Firstly, to reduce the number of engineering graduates emerging from universities expecting a good income when they should have gone and learned to be lawyers or something else on the rise. Fewer engineers ought to mean just the cream stay and provide the skills that don't get outsourced. This is a supply and demand world and the educators and legislators need to more accurately predict how many new engineers, doctors, nurses etc are needed and plan accordingly. That is where governments can be useful, helping create a responsive education system.
Secondly, retraining of skilled engineers mid career. Every industry or sector of industry goes through a life cycle just as products do. Proper product management includes life cycle planning, and end of life planning. What to do to wind down the product and support it in its remaining years, spares, technical support etc. These structured approaches seem lacking when applied to jobs and it always seems a surprise when the coal industry dies or buggy whip making comes to an end but that is life. It will happen to every sector of activity. If it isn't outsourcing, it is something elses affecting another sector of the industry.
As engineers have said all over this web-site, you never stop learning. Learning is a key attribute for anyone, coupled with, not forsight, but fatalism, we should all expect an end to our happy days, or an interuption. What's the other saying? P*** poor planning produces poor results? We apply a lot of skills to products and designs that we could also bring to bear on our own lives. Stop expecting politicians to make things right, they never have and never will. Don't expect them to tackle the problem, better to ask them to tackle the solution which is more mid-life training, career change education, new skills courses. If we are to be engineers, it doesn't matter what we know, but that we can learn to do something new and that is the only real hope we have.
Let's find what we can do something about and do it and stop wasting time on things we have no control over; though we may have little we can do about 9/11 events, there ought to be something we can do about moderating the effects of OPEC.
PS, how is the New Democratic candidate going to make the US self-sufficient in energy? It makes good speach writing, but .... hey, don't answer that here, I'll post it as a new thread.
JMW
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