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Vol. 1, No. 2
February 2006
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Beyond the Outsourcing Angst: Making America More Productive
by Thomas F. Siems
Outsourcing is not new. For years, American companies have
focused on core competencies and contracted out activities that could be
accomplished better, faster and cheaper by outside, specialized providers.
These vendors may be across town, elsewhere in the country or on the far
side of the world.
The motive has always been to remain competitive. In today's business
environment, profit and even survival depend on making constant
improvements throughout supply chains by lowering costs and improving
quality, designs, cycle times and processes. Through specialization and
trade, businesses develop important competitive advantages that help them
become more flexible and innovative in rapidly changing markets.
Indeed, the best companies keep
costs low and boost productivity by doing
what they do best and outsourcing the
rest.[1]
Even when it involves foreign workers,
outsourcing benefits individual companies.
Many Americans, however,
express a deep unease over reports of
firms’ “exporting jobs” and displacing
domestic workers by moving jobs to
India, China or other up-and-coming
nations.
The concern is understandable. Job
losses are painful, especially when they
are related to global economic forces
beyond individual workers’ control. As
reports of outsourcing grow, many
Americans are advocating policies
designed to preserve existing jobs and
industries. But many economists—including
such notables as Milton Friedman
and Jagdish Bhagwati—discourage these
efforts as harmful to the overall economy.[2] They argue that outsourcing increases
efficiency and productivity and leads
to competitiveness, innovation and ever-larger
market opportunities.
Knowledge Workers at Risk
One reason today’s overseas outsourcing
generates heat is the wider
swath of occupations being performed
offshore. Computers, software, the
Internet and fiber-optic cables form an
infrastructure that allows businesses to
break apart activities and redistribute
them elsewhere—increasingly to
knowledge workers all over the world.
Digital technologies and inexpensive
telecommunications have created an
efficient and effective information
superhighway: Strings of zeroes and
ones can be moved to Bangalore,
Beijing or just about anyplace in seconds.
White-collar activities such as processing
accounting data, performing
standard financial analyses, writing routine
software and maintaining call centers
are no longer exempt from international
competition. With an Internet connection
and specialized skills, individuals
and companies in the remotest ends of
the earth are able to compete and collaborate
in today’s global economy.
How many knowledge jobs are
affected by offshore outsourcing? Data
on outsourcing’s effect on employment
are limited, but one estimate puts the
total number of U.S. white-collar jobs
moving overseas at 832,000 through 2005, nearly triple the figure through
2003 (Table 1). In another five years,
the total could rise to 1.7 million; in a
decade, to 3.3 million. We should keep
in mind, however, that the U.S. has
added 18 million jobs in the past 10
years. Total employment rose to nearly
135 million workers in early 2006, so
the offshore outsourcing estimates represent
a relatively small part of a growing
economy. 
The recent increase in offshore
relocation of knowledge work has
been followed by a surge in anti-outsourcing
legislation by U.S. state governments
(Chart 1). According to the
National Foundation for American
Policy, more than 300 bills have been
introduced over the past two years to
protect American workers against outsourcing
to other countries.[3] The
Constitution’s commerce clause constrains
the states’ power to interfere
with business, so many of these proposals
are limited, often covering only
companies doing government work. 
Outsourcing is fundamentally a
trade phenomenon, and empirical evidence
suggests protectionist policies
entail significant economic costs. They
result in higher prices for consumers
and declining domestic and global
competitiveness. The economy also
loses the productivity gains that would
have come from shifting resources to
their best uses. Trade barriers do long-term
harm by short-circuiting healthy
economic evolution.[4]
Protectionist measures rarely save
jobs. A generation ago, American angst
focused on foreign competition’s
impact on manufacturing employment,
particularly in automobiles, steel and
textiles. We passed laws to restrict
imports. Despite trade restraints and
domestic-content laws, manufacturing
jobs continued to decline even as overall
employment rose. Most significant,
some of the biggest job losses have
come in autos, steel and textiles.
Saving existing jobs exacts a price.
Countries that impose laws aimed ateasing the burdens of job loss tend to
have lower per capita incomes (Chart
2). World Bank data indicate that many
countries impose huge burdens on
employers who lay off workers—the
equivalent of 165 weeks of pay in
Brazil, 112 in Turkey, 90 in China, 79 in
India. All are poor countries. High firing
costs rob economies of their vitality by
discouraging companies from hiring
new employees in the first place. While
generous severance is helpful to the
displaced workers, it makes societies
poorer by slowing job creation and
dragging down labor productivity. 
By contrast, countries with lower
burdens on firing are usually richer.
The United States, for example, mandates
no severance at all, allowing
companies to determine their own policies.
Giving companies a freer hand in
staffing decisions allows firms to pare
payrolls quickly in response to changing
market conditions, and it reduces
the risk of hiring and forming new
businesses. This labor market flexibility
encourages efficiency, productivity and
economic growth—all of which contribute
to higher incomes.
Outsourcing often creates employment
uncertainties because it’s not
always immediately apparent where
the new jobs will materialize. History
tells us, however, that job creation outpaces
job destruction in the long run. If
the U.S. had tried to hang onto the jobs
of its past, we would be far poorer
today. Living standards would have
stagnated, and American consumers
would be paying higher prices.[5]
Economists Milton and Rose
Friedman put it this way, “If all we
want are jobs, we can reate any number—
for example, have people dig
holes and then fill them up again or
perform other useless tasks.” The
Friedmans conclude that the real objective
is not just jobs, but productive
jobs—those that will result in more
goods and services for consumers
around the globe.[6]
Toward Greater Productivity
The most successful economies
tend to resist calls for protectionism and
keep their markets open. This sometimes
means short-term economic dislocations,
but in the long run competition
spurs economic progress. The challenge
for U.S. companies and workers
involves reinventing themselves and
creating the next generation of jobs,
products and services.
Recent history proves that lost jobs,
while they often mean hardship for the
affected workers and their families,
aren’t an impediment to growth in one
of the world’s most resilient, dynamic
and flexible economies. From 1980 to
2005, U.S. workers filed 118 million
claims for unemployment insurance
(Table 2). Many others lost their jobs, of
course, but either didn’t qualify for benefits,
weren’t unemployed long enough
to file claims, or quickly transitioned to
new jobs. It’s hard to find the total
number of displaced workers, but it
surely would be more than 150 million. 
Despite all the job losses, the
economy performed quite well. Total
employment over the same 26-year
period rose by 44 million. At annual
rates, unemployment fell from 7.2 percent
to less than 5 percent today. Productivity increased by 72 percent.
Per capita real gross domestic product
shot from $25,309 to $41,257. The average
workweek fell by nearly two hours
to 33.7, and average household real net
worth more than doubled to $431,000.
All this was accomplished, by the way,
with relatively little economic downtime.
Since the beginning of 1983, the
United States has had just 16 months of
recession, fewer than any other major
country (Table 3).
Increasing productivity—getting
more for less—is key to business success
and the ultimate source of higher
living standards. Sometimes greater
productivity means automating processes
and replacing workers with
improved technologies. Sometimes it
entails adding resources to work on
high value-added activities. Sometimes
it involves moving noncritical work to
lower-cost providers.
Today, global firms increasingly
use outsourcing to redeploy and redirect
staff to higher value-added activities.
Farming out some tasks frees up
talent to work on new products and
new ideas. It creates greater worker
flexibility and allows firms to put the
right resources in the right places at the
right times.
Competition gives companies the
incentive to move production to lower-cost
locations. Large segments of the
textile industry left New England for
the Southeast; more recently, textile
plants in the Carolinas have closed as
companies shift production to other
parts of the world. Automobile manufacturers
sent a lot of their parts and
assembly work to Mexico in an effort
to compete with Asian rivals. The electronics
industry has developed a global
supply chain, and it takes components
from a hodgepodge of nations to build
computers and other gadgets.
Laptops, for example, are assembled
in Mexico with memory chips and
display screens from South Korea;
cases, keyboards and hard drives from
Thailand; graphics chips from Taiwan;
and batteries from any number of
Asian countries. The microprocessor,
the machine’s highest valued and most
complex part, is still made in the
United States. This is the future of business—
a global integration of production,
where countries do what they do
best, dictated by David Ricardo’s principle
of comparative advantage.
As a technological powerhouse,
with skilled workers and adept managers,
the U.S. should strive for the
most complex and rewarding tasks,
while other countries will specialize in
the routine, labor-intensive tasks.
Globalization doesn’t just mean
increased competition; it opens opportunities
for cooperation.
Outsourcing creates partners, not
rivals. For example, India has historically
been viewed as an attractive place to
do knowledge work because of its low
production and labor costs, talented
and skilled workforce, and English-language
proficiency. A.T. Kearney Inc.
ranks India as the most attractive offshore
location for doing business
(Chart 3), particularly for call centers
and data-processing operations. Among
the U.S. companies expanding their
presence in India are Dell, Sun
Microsystems, Ford, General Electric
and Oracle. 
The key differences between India
two decades ago and now are twofold:
(1) the role that technology has played
in quickly and inexpensively subdividing
and moving work, and (2) the
nation’s willingness to remove regulatory
burdens and attract foreign firms to
establish operations there. The availability,
affordability and speed of
today’s technologies allow Indian
workers to instantaneously provide
highly competitive services to organizations
around the globe. And since the
new era of fewer regulatory burdens
began in 1991, foreign direct investment
into India has increased dramatically
(Chart 4). 
History has proven the power of
letting global competition run its
course: Many better, higher-paying jobs
have been created as new ideas and
technologies replace older ones. The
key to the U.S. economy’s future lies in
maintaining a flexible labor market,
where resources can flow from declining
sectors to emerging ones.
Innovation and entrepreneurship
depend on it. Job losses and other
unsettling aspects of the process can’t
be ignored, and society can consider
policies to make economic change less
burdensome. Preparing workers for
new opportunities through retraining
and education is often mentioned as an
alternative to protecting existing jobs.
Outsourcing’s Future
Offshore outsourcing presents
complex and often divisive issues, but it is unlikely to wither away. The market
pressures that create incentives for
outsourcing will not abate. Our economy,
however, is resilient and flexible.
The long-run evidence on
employment-turnover patterns demonstrates
that offshore outsourcing
results in overall economic gains,
such as lower consumer prices, better
products and higher productivity
growth.
Like other trade, offshore outsourcing
can have negative impacts
on some jobs and wages while affecting
others in a positive way. These
structural changes influence where
jobs are located and what tasks workers
perform. While policy can address
ways to help displaced workers gain
the necessary skills to compete in the
global economy, it also can encourage
Americans to embrace change
and adapt to globalization’s effects on
the changing nature of work.
We have a choice. Saving specific
jobs and industries inhibits innovation
and short-circuits the next round of
new jobs and services, raising prices
for everyone.
Accepting the challenge of competition,
however, takes a longer-run
view. It leads to innovation and ever-larger
market opportunities and, in the
end, true productive job creation and
a lower cost of living. Indeed, the
secret to faster growth and greater
prosperity lies in allowing individuals
and businesses to do what they do
best—and outsource the rest.
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| About
the Author
Siems is a senior economist and policy
advisor in the Research Department of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
The author thanks
Julia Carter and Timothy J.
Schaaf for assistance in research.
- A prelude to this article is “Do What You Do
Best, Outsource the Rest?” by Thomas F. Siems
and Adam S. Ratner, Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas Southwest Economy, November/December
2003, pp. 13–14.
- The debate over outsourcing is clearly framed
in “The Muddles over Outsourcing,” by Jagdish
Bhagwati, Arvind Panagariya and T.N. Srinivasan,
Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 18, no. 4,
Fall 2004, pp. 93–114.
- “Outsourcing Saves Money,” by Stuart Anderson,
State Legislatures Magazine, June 2005,
and “Outsourcing Attacks Not Over,” by Stuart
Anderson, National Review, February 11, 2005.
- Interested readers are directed to In Defense of
Globalization, by Jagdish Bhagwati, New York:
Oxford University Press, 2004.
- Job anxieties brought on by offshore outsourcing
highlight the tension between efficiency and
distributional concerns. See “A Specific-Factors
View on Outsourcing,” by Wilhelm Kohler, North
American Journal of Economics and Finance,
vol.12, issue 1, 2001, pp. 31–53, and “What
Does Evidence Tell Us About Fragmentation and
Outsourcing?” by Ronald Jones, Henryk
Kierzkowski and Chen Lurong, International
Review of Economics and Finance, vol. 14, 2005,
pp. 305–16.
- “The Case for Free Trade,” by Milton Friedman
and Rose Friedman, Hoover Digest, no. 4, 1997.
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