Title: Globalization and Offshoring of Software:
1Globalization and Offshoring of
Software Examining the Myths
Eric Roberts Stanford Computer Forum April 18,
2006
2Myths about Employment An Example
3Myths about Employment An Example
All this talk about Blue Skies ahead just cant
hide the stark fact that Americans who dont wish
to migrate to India and/or some other off-shore
haven are going to have a difficult career.
Why would any smart American undergrad go into IT
when companies like IBM and HP are talking of
stepping up their off-shoring efforts in the
coming years? They want cheap labor, no matter
the real cost.
I have been very successful in IT, but I
certainly wouldnt recommend it today to anyone
except people who are geeks. . . .
I think the latest figures from the U.S.
Department of Labor are not correct.
4The No Jobs Myth Affects Enrollments
5The Crisis in Computing Education
- The Computing Research Association estimates that
computing enrollments have fallen between 40 and
50 percent since 2000. - A UCLA study of students entering college shows
that the number of students listing CS as a
possible major has declined significantly in
recent years.
6Myths about Offshoring and Globalization
7Myth 1 Software Jobs Have Disappeared
- There was a slight dip in IT-sector employment
after 2000. - Recent data show that this trend has reversed,
and that there are now more jobs in this sector
than at any time in history. - Projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
indicate strong growth over the next decade
8IT Salaries Remain High
9Myth 2 Offshoring Will Eliminate All Jobs
- Offshoring of jobs in the IT sector is certainly
occurring, although good data are hard to find.
The best available estimates suggest that 2 to 3
percent of IT jobs move offshore each year. - At the same time, employment data in the IT
sector suggest that new jobs are being created
more quickly than jobs are being moved overseas.
Thus, offshoring of software seems so far to have
increased the number of jobs, not only in India
and China, but in the United States as well. - This phenomenon of being an economic boon to both
countries is, of course, the basis of the theory
of comparative advantage that underlies
globalization.
10Myth 3 Good Workers Are Easy to Find
- Good workers in the broad IT area are in fact
very difficult to find. Bill Gates and other
industry leaders have made this point on several
occasions. They hire in India and Chinanot
because labor is cheaperbut because thats where
the engineers are. - Individual productivity among individual software
developers varies enormously. - There has long been an undersupply of software
developers relative to what one finds in most
other fields.
11Microsoft on the IT Worker Shortage
Thursday, April 28, 2005
Gates Cites Hiring Woes, Criticizes Visa
Restrictions
By David A. Vise Washington Post Staff
Writer Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates said
yesterday the software giant is having enormous
difficulty filling computer jobs in the United
States as a result of tight visa restrictions on
foreign workers and a declining interest among
U.S. students in computer science.
Speaking on a technology panel at the Library of
Congress, Gates said a decline in the number of
U.S. students pursuing careers in science and
technology is hurting Microsoft in the short run,
and could have serious long-term consequences for
the U.S. economy if the problem is not addressed.
12Microsoft on the IT Worker Shortage
Thursday, April 28, 2005
Gates Cites Hiring Woes, Criticizes Visa
Restrictions
Richard F. Rashid, senior vice president of
Microsoft Research, said he recently told his
son, who is an undergraduate studying computer
science, that he would have plenty of jobs to
choose from when he graduates. Were hiring as
many people from college campuses as we can, but
there are just not enough of them available,
Rashid said.
13Variations in Programmer Productivity
- In 1968, a study by Sackman, Erikson, and Grant
revealed that programmers with the same level of
experience exhibit variations of more than 20 to
1 in the time required to solve particular
programming problems. - More recent studies Curtis 1981, DeMarco and
Lister 1985, Brian 1997 confirm this high
variability. - Many employers in Silicon Valley argue that this
productivity variance is even higher today,
perhaps as much as 100 to 1.
14A Long-Term IT Labor Shortage Exists
Fraction of professionals with degrees in that
discipline
Life Sciences
Chemical and Physical Sciences
Mathematics
Engineering
Computing and Information Science
Source National Science Foundation/Division of
Science Resources Statistics, SESTAT (Scientists
and Engineers Statistical Data System), 1999, as
presented by Caroline Wardle at Snowbird 2002
15Myth 4 Companies Seek to Minimize Cost
- Minimizing cost is not the goal of a corporation
maximizing return is. This fact has critical
implications for hiring decisions. - Suppose that you are Microsoft and that you can
hire a software developer from Stanford whose
loaded costs will be 200,000 per year. Over in
Bangalore, however, you can hire a software
developer for 50,000 per year. Both are equally
talented and will create 1,000,000 annually in
value. What do you do? - Although the developer in Bangalore has a higher
return, the optimal strategy is to hire them
both. After all, why throw away 800,000 a year? - Any elementary economics textbook will explain
that one hires as long as the marginal value of
the new employee is greater than the marginal
cost.
16Myth 5 Globalization Is Always Good/Bad
- The issue of globalization is controversial and
tends to divide people according to their
political perspective. The Right tends to see
globalization as the inevitable culmination of
free-market principles the Left regards it as a
strategy to entrench the power of privileged
nations and people. - Globalization is far more complicated than this
simple analysis suggests, both in theory and in
practice. Both sides of the debate need to
recognize the strengths of the other side.
17Talking Past Each Other
18Talking Past Each Other
19Globalization and its Discontents
As his title suggests, Joseph Stiglitz is not an
uncritical supporter of global trade. He does,
however, criticize the one-sided thinking that
both sides of the issue typically bring to the
debate.
Joseph Stiglitz
20Globalization and its Discontents
As his title suggests, Joseph Stiglitz is not an
uncritical supporter of global trade. He does,
however, criticize the one-sided thinking that
both sides of the issue typically bring to the
debate.
Joseph Stiglitz
21Globalization and its Discontents
As his title suggests, Joseph Stiglitz is not an
uncritical supporter of global trade. He does,
however, criticize the one-sided thinking that
both sides of the issue typically bring to the
debate.
Joseph Stiglitz
22George Soros on Market Fundamentalism
Billionaire financier George Soros argues that
the future of free society is threatened as much
by a dogmatic market fundamentalism as it is by
religious fundamentalism.
George Soros
23George Soros on Market Fundamentalism
Billionaire financier George Soros argues that
the future of free society is threatened as much
by a dogmatic market fundamentalism as it is by
religious fundamentalism.
George Soros
24Other Interesting Recent Books
25My Top Two Reading Recommendations
26Conclusions of the ACM Report
27Conclusions of the ACM Report
28The New York Times On the ACM Report
Wednesday, March 1, 2005
Computing Error
The outsourcing of computing work overseas may
not be as bad as you think. In fact, it probably
isnt bad at all. Consider one recent study that
says the problem isnt so much the competition
from high-tech workers in places as far-flung as
India and Romania as it is the discouragement
caused by the doomsayers themselves. The
Association for Computing Machinery, the
professional organization that issued the report,
says that there are more information technology
jobs today than at the height of the dot-com
boom. While 2 to 3 percent of American jobs in
the field migrate to other nations each year, new
jobs have thus far more than made up for the
loss. . . .
29The New York Times On the ACM Report
Wednesday, March 1, 2005
Computing Error
That picture, of course, stands in contrast with
the more familiar gloomy depiction of runaway
outsourcing. Perhaps that explains what the
report says is declining interest in computer
science among American college students. Students
may think, Why bother if all the jobs are in
India? But the computer sector is booming, while
the number of students interested in going into
the field is falling. The industry isnt gone,
but it will be if we dont start generating the
necessary dynamic work force. The association
says that higher-end technology jobslike those
in researchare beginning to go overseas and that
policies to attract, educate and retain the best
I.T. talent are critical to future success. . .
.
30The New York Times On the ACM Report
Wednesday, March 1, 2005
Computing Error
Information technology jobs wont go away unless
we let them. Computing in the past five years has
become, according to the report, a truly global
industry. In the next few years, jobs wont just
land in our laps. We have nothing to fear but the
fear of competing itself.
31The End