US may outsource plum white-collar jobs
US may outsource plum white-collar jobs
Job losses in US could mount as companies shift thousands of more professional white-collar jobs offshore.

Chicago: Job losses in the United States from outsourcing, already a touchy political issue, could mushroom in the next decade as companies shift hundreds of thousands more professional white-collar jobs offshore, according to a new study.

Fortune 500 companies could potentially save $58 billion annually, or some $116 million per company, by offshoring general and administrative jobs, according to the Hackett Group, a strategic advisory firm.

Hackett will formally issue the study next week.

The study estimates that increased use of cheaper overseas labor could affect up to 1.47 million back-office jobs over the next decade, or nearly 3,000 at a typical Fortune 500 company. And the jobs under review will go far beyond call centers.

"People have become more confident in the analytical capabilities of the overseas staff, and that is expanding the profile of the kinds of jobs that are under consideration," Wayne Mincey, the Hackett Group's president, told Reuters from Atlanta.

Some of the jobs that can now more readily be shipped overseas than they could several years ago include those in information technology, finance, human resources and procurement.

The education base and skill set, and with it the potential savings on labor costs, are on the rise in India, China, the Philippines, Pakistan, Eastern Europe, Brazil and other emerging countries, the Hackett study said.

Sending certain jobs offshore results in typical savings in salaries of about 70 percent, compared to savings of 10 percent to 20 percent by moving jobs to lower-cost US locations, Mincey said.

The poor get richer

"Executives have to take a much closer look because the savings are so large it becomes a competitive issue," he added.

The Hackett study suggested that many companies are relying on outdated analysis to assess the benefits of outsourcing and risk "under-scoping" such initiatives.

But once they get up to speed, it could be "Katie bar the (office) door."

Hackett is a division of Answerthink Inc, a business and technology consulting firm.

Competition from foreign companies has ushered in the decline of American automakers such as Ford (Charts) and GM (Charts), while pressure from foreign labor markets has seen jobs for such companies as Newell Rubbermaid (Charts) and Apple (Charts) move offshore.

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://ugara.net/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!