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New news.google.com is your friend too. :-)
AFP via MENAFN [link|http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story.asp?StoryId=CpRcBWeiente4mfvtrMLUyw5JAwfSu2vJD|here]:

NEW YORK, May 1 (AFP) - US banks, brokers, insurance and other financial groups plan to move 500,000 jobs overseas in the next five years, with India the most enticing target, a study showed Thursday.

Relocations were expected to save 30 billion dollars a year in operating costs, said the study by management consulting firm A.T. Kearney, which spoke to about 100 financial services firms' executives.

"Any function that does not require face-to-face contact is now perceived as a candidate for offshore relocation," A.T. Kearney managing director Andrea Bierce, who ran the study, said in a statement.

Jobs being transferred overseas once focussed on back office functions such as data entry or account checking, Bierce said. Now, jobs such as financial analysis and research were going abroad.

"The debate at major financial services companies today is no longer whether to relocate some business functions but rather which ones and where," she said.

Half of the survey's respondents, however, said offshore initiatives so far had been ineffective or that it was too early to measure the impact.

A.T. Kearney issued its own ranking of countries already hosting multinationals and offering mature technology, a skilled labor force, expectations of future development and scope for expansion.

They were ranked according to cost, environment and people.

India was selected as the best choice for offshore business processing, followed by Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Philippines, Hungary, Ireland, Czech Republic, Australia, Russia and China.

China was expected to become increasingly popular as US businesses gained confidence that their intellectual property rights would be protected, A.T. Kearney said.

"We already know that one major insurance company is developing an innovative product to protect intellectual property," Bierce said.

"As these types of products proliferate, we believe China will make great strides in attracting US financial services companies."


Emphasis added.

There's no magic bullet - luckily.

And speaking of Australia: [link|http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/05/01/1051382039613.html|HP to move Australian jobs to India]. Hmmm...

Cheers,
Scott.
New Thanks for the link.
It's not the Wall Street Journal article, but one like it.

[link|http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/030501/financial_wallst_offshore_2.html|Here] is a similar one from Reuters.

I remember when IBM started using contract programmers in Taiwan for some projects about 15 years ago. The results were quite mixed - some good some disastrous. But, over time, it's possible to get consistently good results (for the company).

Today, I would not recommend to someone in high school to aim for a carreer in IT or for that matter anything that is not literally hands on or require your physical presence.
Alex

Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction. -- Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
New Back to trades???
Plumber, auto mechanic, A/C person?
New Well, you could be a surgeon, court room lawyer, etc. :)
Alex

Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction. -- Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
New My phone is still quiet as Saddam
US banks, brokers, insurance and other financial groups plan to move 500,000 jobs overseas in the next five years, with India the most enticing target,

'bout time they offsource the guys who pushed offsourcing
________________
oop.ismad.com
     Maybe things are picking up - (tuberculosis) - (8)
         Heard on CNBC today that a Wall Street article... - (a6l6e6x) - (7)
             news.google.com is your friend too. :-) - (Another Scott) - (4)
                 Thanks for the link. - (a6l6e6x) - (2)
                     Back to trades??? - (gdaustin) - (1)
                         Well, you could be a surgeon, court room lawyer, etc. :) -NT - (a6l6e6x)
                 My phone is still quiet as Saddam - (tablizer)
             So who will be the customers again? - (tuberculosis) - (1)
                 Prisoner's dilemma - (inthane-chan)

Not that I'd ever eat a fish that was lured to WD-40, but hey...
40 ms