Ohio bans outsourcing of government projects
September 8th, 2010 - 8:42 pm ICT by IANS ( 2 comments )By Arun Kumar
Washington, Sep 8 (IANS) In a move that would hit Indian IT companies, America’s Ohio state has prohibited spending of public funds for services provided offshore.
“No public funds should be spent on services provided offshore,” Ohio Governor Ted Strickland said in an executive order issued Aug 6 asking state officials to “remain passionately focused on initiatives that will create and retain jobs in the United States in general and in Ohio, in particular”.
“Allowing public funds to pay for offshore services undermines economic development objectives and any such offshore services carry unacceptable quality and security risks,” said the order that came into effect Aug 31.
“Outsourcing jobs does not reflect Ohio values,” Strickland said. “Ohioans have been among the hardest hit by more than a decade of unfair trade agreements and the trickle-down economic policies that promoted offshoring jobs at the expense of Ohioans who work for a living.
“We must do everything within our power to prevent outsourcing jobs because it undermines our economic development objectives, slows our recovery and deprives Ohioans and other Americans of employment opportunities,” he added.
The order does not specifically mention India, but Indian companies derive more than half their revenues from the US, and TCS, India’s largest IT company, runs a project in Ohio. It employs 300 people and gets $19 million in tax credit for creating local jobs.
Ohio’s move follows the passage of a Federal law to raise $600 million for enhancing security on the US-Mexico border with a steep hike for H-1B and L-1 visa fees for companies with less than half American employees.
The Indian government has threatened to take the US to the World Trade Organization (WTO) over what it considers a “discriminatory law” as it would largely hit Indian companies unfairly.
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
- India to raise US visa fee hike, outsourcing ban at trade dialogue - Sep 21, 2010
- Ohio Unemployment Forces Government To Restrict Outsourcing To Asian Countries - Sep 13, 2010
- IT professionals slam US decision to forbid outsourcing of government projects - Sep 09, 2010
- Amid Indian protests, US House okays bill to hike visa fees - Aug 11, 2010
- Corporate America slams US move to tax Indian firms - Aug 11, 2010
- Protectionism will kill growth and innovation: Sharma - Sep 22, 2010
- US Senate rejects bill to curb outsourcing - Sep 29, 2010
- Indian IT industry terms Ohio's outsourcing ban 'discriminative' - Sep 08, 2010
- US Senate polls: Democratic outsource attack alienating Indian American vote bank - Oct 24, 2010
- Eyeing election, Obama calls for bringing jobs back home (Second lead) - Jan 25, 2012
- Indian IT firms look to Europe to diversify business - Sep 15, 2010
- Obama begins re-election campaign, hits out at outsourcing (Lead) - Jan 25, 2012
- Outsourcing, retail didn't figure in delegation level talks - Nov 09, 2010
- India to raise visa fee hike, outsourcing issues with US (Lead) - Sep 10, 2010
- US curbs disturbing, but have no immediate impact: Nasscom - Sep 15, 2010
Tags: arun kumar, development objectives, discriminatory law, enhancing security, government projects, governor ted strickland, indian government, offshore services, ohio governor ted strickland, ohioans, security risks, steep hike, tcs india, ted strickland, trickle down, unfair trade, us mexico border, visa fees, world trade organization, world trade organization wto
September 11th, 2010 at 3:53 pm
I am glad the state of OHIO has started in motion what I hope will become national policy in the USA - ban on ALL outsourced government contract work.
Additionally, I hope Republicn operated USA companies are TAXXED to high heaven if they outsource work to either American or foreign workers at rates LOWER than the current USA minimum wage.
Republican businesses are rushing to replace hourly wage and salaried employees with outsourced workers whom they pay mere pennies on the dollars earned by employees.
Platforms like Amazon Turk and Crowdflower (run by the unethical Republicans at Dolores Labs who literally STEAL money workers earn) need to be replaced by ethically operated businesses that pay living wages.
October 12th, 2010 at 6:45 am
To the comment above. I am an Ohio worker, born and raised here in the USA and guess what? I’m employed by none other than a company that is based in India. I don’t quite share your view. For me its about having a job and a very good paying job. Outsourcing does not always mean its off shore. Want to outlaw outsourcing? That would wrap up ManPower, Kelly Services, K-Force, Tek-Systems and a few hundred other companies as well. Services are out sourced not just to save money, in fact many times it cost far MORE to outsource. Why outsource? My experience has been that getting the correct skill set for the job position to be filled here in the good ol’ USA cant be done sue to a lack of qualified applicants. Want to turn things around? Lets focus on what the long term solution is then. Education! For the youth, young adults, middle aged and seniors. The bottom line is that the educated qualified applicant ALWAYS gets the job. Where they hail from is not a factor. The only factor is…Are they QUALIFIED!