The-offshoring-of-America.docx
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1、如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流The-offshoring-of-America【精品文档】第 24 页9-708-030 R E V: APR I L 22, 2008 RI CH A R D H . K. VI E T OR JAN W . R I V K IN JU LI A N A S E M I NER I OThe Offshoring of AmericaWhen a good or service is produced at lower cost in another country, it makes sense to import it rather than
2、to produce it domestically. This allows the United States to devote its resources to more productive purposes. The Council of Economic Advisors1President Bush is on an eight-day tour of Asia. Hes visiting American jobs. David Letterman, late-night comedianAs the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign heate
3、d up, candidates scrambled for policy positions on a tricky topic: the movement of jobs from the United States offshore, often to developing countries and within American companies who had set up subsidiaries in foreign countries. In June 2007, a memo from Barack Obamas staff hit a nerve. The memo r
4、eferred to Hillary Clinton as a senator from the Indian state of Punjab and suggested that Clinton was too close to executives and companies that were moving jobs to India. The memo backfired, forcing Obama to apologize to Indian-Americans and to reassure his business backers that he did not oppose
5、all offshoring efforts.2 Presidential candidates have struggled to explain what steps, if any, they would take to limit offshoring.At the same time, senior managers struggled to decide which activities, if any, to move offshore and where to move them. Many companies, such as IBM, had taken dramatic
6、steps. IBM had moved its global procurement chief from New York to Shenzhen, China in 2006; performed its back-office financial work in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; provided global support for its Web sites out of Ireland and Brazil; and moved research efforts into China, India, and Israel.3 IBMs workfor
7、ce in India grew from 3,000 in 2002 to 53,000 in 2007. During the same period, its headcount fell slightly in the United States, where computer programmers salaries were two to ten times higher than in India.4 The shift in employment was controversial inside and outside the company: union organizers
8、 had interrupted a recent IBM shareholders meeting with chants of “Offshore the CEO.”5Policy makers in developing countries also faced choices about offshoringbut as an opportunity rather than a challenge. For instance, Mexicos maquiladoras, Chinas Special Economic Zones (SEZs), and Indias software
9、outsourcers had attracted billions of dollars in foreign direct investment. The Mexican maquiladoras had existed since the 1960s, but they had become especially popular after the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1993. The Chinese SEZs were formed in conjunction with refo
10、rms of the post-Maoist era to usher in gradual economic opennessProfessors Richard H.K. Vietor and Jan W. Rivkin and Research Associate Juliana Seminerio prepared this case with the assistance of Research Associate Troy Smith. This case was developed from published sources. HBS cases are developed s
11、olely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.Copyright 2008 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800
12、-545-7685, write Harvard Business School Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to http:/www.hbsp.harvard.edu. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, used in a spreadsheet, or transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, o
13、r otherwisewithout the permission of Harvard Business School.708-30 The Offshoring of Americaand trade with the West. Indias intellectual capital created a potential for inexpensive white-collar labor after 1991 after the countrys brush with bankruptcy forced a liberalization program that continued
14、in 2008. The governments in all three countries created favorable business environments that enabled foreign companies to seize opportunities for sales growth or cost reduction not available in their home countries. In turn, Mexico, China, and India sought to increase inflows of foreign direct inves
15、tment to fund this growth, employment, and the acquisition of management skills and technology.The Nature of OffshoringDebates about offshoring were muddied in part by the lack of an agreed-upon definition for the term.6 In its broadest sense, offshoring involved the transfer of job activities abroa
16、d, often to attain lower labor costs and centered mainly around manufacturing operations (e.g., a PC maker shuts down assembly operations in Texas and opens similar operations in China) and service delivery (e.g., a PC maker shuts down its technical support hotline in Colorado and opens a similar ho
17、tline in Bangalore, India). The term “offshoring” also described both the shift of activities from the U.S. facilities to wholly-owned subsidiaries (e.g., a company sets up an Indian subsidiary to run its data centers) and the outsourcing of activities to other companies abroad (e.g., a company sign
18、s a contract with Wipro to run its data centers in India). Further variations of offshoring arose when, for instance, a U.S. company expanded its operations overseas but maintained existing operations in the U.S., or when it opened an offshore facility but sold the new output exclusively overseas. E
19、xhibits 1 and 2 show two efforts by the U.S. Government Accountability Office to distinguish offshoring from other practices.The character of offshore activity shifted over time as conditions in host countries changed, as companies grew skilled and comfortable in managing distant operations, as comp
20、etition in various industries intensified, and as communication and computing technology evolved. Among the earliest jobs to move abroad en masse were low-skill assembly operations that migrated to Mexico and Asia in the 1980s. The gradual economic opening of China in the 1980s and 1990s, the renais
21、sance of Eastern Europe after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, and the development of contract outsourcers during the 1990s accelerated the shift of manufacturing jobs offshore. The so-called “Washington Consensus”a set of economic liberalization policies that India began adopting in 1991set the st
22、age for gradually increasing foreign investment in India. Meanwhile, Indian software vendors proved their abilities by helping U.S. companies manage the potential Y2K computer crisis in 2000. The advent of the Internet, the popularization of email, the standardization of computer platforms, and over
23、investment in global telecommunications capacity during the high-tech bubbleall events of the 1990sfacilitated the shift of offshoring from manufacturing to services. Among the first services to shift offshore in large scale were software programming, call-center operations, and data- center managem
24、ent.By 2007, the general public associated offshoring with assembly operations, computer programming, and technical help desks. Yet a wider range of services were beginning to move overseas, as the following examples illustrate. Brickwork, a division of Indian firm B2K, offered a “remote executive a
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