The mother
of all issues this political season,
it seems, is outsourcing, or rather
the problem with it.
All the
Democratic presidential candidates have
been banging up on it, although it does
seem that Sen. John Kerry, the presumptive
nominee of the party, is the least protectionist
among them. President Bush, like on
just about everything else, does not
quite know what to think.
But it
is abundantly clear that outsourcing
will be the stuff of political football
this presidential cycle. And that means
one should expect that restrictive rules
will emerge over the next few months.
As India is one of the principal destination
for outsourcing companies, we need to
be attentive to this debate.
There
is immense irony in seeing Americans
bent out of shape over the consequences
of outsourcing to its domestic labor
force.
For years,
successive American governments have
preached the gospel of free trade to
the rest of the world as that has suited
their economic interests.
But free trade, thus far, has meant
principally a supply of low-priced raw
goods from the developing world and
the sale of high priced finished products
by developed countries to them in return.
There
were some hiccups in this lopsided system,
like when the manufacturing base of
the West began to slide and was lapped
up by countries like China, South Korea,
Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore and Hong
Kong.
But that cycle passed, because it was
also tied to the logic of Western economic
systems and lifestyle issues.
Indeed,
Western economies quickly adapted cheap
manufacturing labor as an intrinsic
component of their economic hegemony.
But the
transfer of white collar jobs, high
tech jobs as a matter of fact, has the
potential for seriously undercutting
the advantages that the West has calculatingly
enshrined into the global trade system
for decades. Hence this uproar.
The West has never accepted the idea
of open trade of labor, even as it has
enforced its model of free trade of
goods.
It has
occasionally purchased this labor through
limited immigration, which it modulates
and controls, often in ridiculous ways.
At the height of the tech boom, for
instance, the U.S. tripled its quota
of H-1 visas, which trades in high technology
professional assets.
But the
policy lapsed in October 2003, just
as the dot coms fizzled, so the quota
is now back to 65,000. But this quota
for 2004 was fully exhausted by mid
February.
Ironically, this shift to outsourcing
would be reduced if the H1 visa expansion
program were still operational. But
reason and logic are not the stuff of
political theater.
In general,
Democrats tend to be more protectionist
on trade, which is actually in sync
with the needs of most developing societies,
who feel the urge to protect their domestic
markets.
However,
now that America and the West have effectively
browbeaten developing societies, such
as India, into prying open their markets,
the new American imperative to close
down its own market could be devastating
to both the United States and the outsource
capital, India.
The one
relief is just how short term American
public memory really is. Should the
economy sputter back, this outsourcing
hoopla will likely pass.
Whatever these temporary diversions,
ultimately, outsourcing will be driven
by its inevitable economic logic, which
seems, at least at present, irrefutable.
But then, there is the next big thing.