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HOW YOUNG ENGINEERS AND OUR ECONOMY ARE BETRAYED



Posted: 05/02/09

How Young Engineers and Our Economy Are Betrayed
by Phyllis Schlafly May 1, 2009
The Georgia Dome, home of the Atlanta Falcons football team, was recently crowded with cheering fans and adrenaline-filled competitors. A thrilling competition crowned new champions.

But this was not a football game. It was a robotics competition for high school students interested in engineering, a program that now attracts about 200,000 student-competitors and nearly 100,000 volunteers.

Known as FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), this program demonstrates that there is no shortage of American engineering minds. Started nearly 20 years ago by Dean Kamen, the inventor of the clever Segway that officials scoot around on, this competition develops future American engineers.

The students are extraordinarily diverse, coming from public and private schools and homeschools, rich and poor, urban and rural, athletic and disabled. Colleges provide up to $10 million in scholarships.

Obviously, there is no shortage of teenage interest and aptitude in engineering. But their prospects for good American jobs are very limited.

Large corporations prefer to use H-1B visas to hire foreign engineers and computer technicians. H-1B workers increased threefold during the Clinton Administration, and CEOs are constantly demanding that the number be increased or even unlimited.

Large corporations prefer H-1B foreigners because they work for lower wages with fewer rights. A recent study by researchers at top business schools reported that H-1B visas depress wages for software engineers and programmers by as much as 6 percent.

The cumulative effect, as described by another study, depresses wages even more. Many U.S. engineers even lost their jobs just after they were required to train their foreign replacements.

"In this paper, we simply sought to dispel the myth that globalization generates no losers," wrote the researchers of this latest study. Their credentials are impeccable: one author, Lorin Hitt, is a Wharton professor of operations and information management, and the other, Prasanna Tambe, is an assistant professor at New York University's Stern School.

Their study meticulously reviewed worker data from nearly 7,500 U.S. companies. The researchers studied how job hiring practices in companies that use H-1B visas, and also offshore other jobs, are different from companies that do not.

The Americans hardest hit by H-1B visas, according to these researchers, are recent college graduates and those who want to change jobs. One of the reasons why big corporations prefer to hire H-1Bers is that foreign workers are restrained, almost like indentured servants, from changing jobs and competing with their original employer.

Americans used indentured services in the 1600s when plantation workers were brought to Virginia to work for seven years in exchange for a free voyage to the New World. Later, this practice was supplanted by African slavery.

That's certainly not a model to imitate today. H-1B visas disrupt the free enterprise system that has yielded tremendous wealth to America and the world.

It is estimated that more than 400,000 foreigners are working in our country on H-1Bs, because there is no accountability for the requirement to seek U.S. workers first, and thousands of H-1B workers are exempt from the so-called cap. At least 100,000 American programmers are unemployed, and it is probable that many times that number are underemployed (driving trucks or bagging groceries) rather than using their technical skills.

President Obama has already named Indian Americans to two positions that will make decisions about which government jobs are filled by H-1Bs and outsourced to India: Aneesh Chopra as Chief Technology Officer and Vivek Kundra as Chief Information Officer.

The major factor in American economic leadership of the world has been our primacy in innovation, which has always produced far more benefits than the rest of the world combined. Thomas Edison, named the most influential man of the last thousand years by Life Magazine, personified Yankee ingenuity and its prodigious benefits.

The large corporations that demand H-1B visas do not really want future Thomas Edisons or Wright Brothers because they will bring competition. Microsoft, for example, has every incentive to discourage innovation by young minds that might compete and challenge its profitable status quo.

The argument that foreigners brought here under H-1B visas are smarter or more productive than Americans is simply false. The prestigious ACM Software System Award recognizes innovation, but Professor Norm Matloff showed that only two out of 54 of its awards through 2001 were to foreign-born recipients.

Our military superiority depends heavily on technological advances, and we cannot rely on foreign engineers for that. Advanced robots are essential for saving lives of servicemen as we combat terrorism.

The 200,000 bright minds who competed in the FIRST robotics program could take our economy to new heights just as did American inventors of the past. But if they continue to be displaced by H-1B visas and end up in non-engineering jobs, the result will be disappointing to them and devastating to our economy.

Distributed by www.worldviewweekend.com

By Phyllis Schlafly

Click here for bio and archived articles

Disclaimer: Worldview Weekend, Christian Worldview Network and its columnists do not necessarily endorse or agree with every opinion expressed in every article posted on this site. We do however, encourage a healthy and friendly debate on the issues of our day. Whether you agree or disagree, we encourage you to post your feedback by using the feedback button.

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READER FEEDBACK


Right conclusion but wrong premise
Posted On: 05/05/09 08:16:47 PM Age 58, TX
True enough that the best paying, high-skilled jobs are moving off shore. Would like to see Phyllis document her case against Microsoft in terms of discouraging innovation amongst its software engineers. In addition, USA labor laws are becoming increasingly onerous and expensive to comply with, and is a powerful motivation to seek solutions out of the reach of those laws.



More Real Facts
Posted On: 05/05/09 10:55:08 AM Age 56, FL
I work for a VERY large, worldwide IT Supplier. About 3,000 U.S. jobs are moved off-shore each year. The people are replaced with workers that cost 1/3 to 1/4 the U.S. rates. For example, my position charges $233 per hour; a comparable off-shore worker charges about $70. But those off-shore workers will work significantly longer hours and are willing to travel and stay at a customer location for extended periods of time. While they are paid much less, the money they make goes a long way in their home country. And while the rate of project failure is 10% greater when off-shore resources are used, companies continue to look for ways to decrease costs. For example, when was the last time you called customer service and spoke to a native, English-speaking representative? There are times I think that I should move to another company that doesn't send work and our dollars to countries that hate Christians. But what IT company is left in the U.S. that doesn't use off-shore resources? Our government has made it too easy to move jobs abroad.

The white collar workers didn't care when manufacturing jobs were going overseas
Posted On: 05/05/09 10:31:59 AM Age 48, MO
The white collar workers of this country didn't care when trade agreements and tax policy encouraged American businesses to move their operations overseas and 100's of thousands of American manufacturing workers could no longer find employment at livable wages, or that the wages of the manufacturing workers that still have jobs in this country have been stagnant for the last 20 years. They haven't cared as illegals have overtaken Americans in the areas of the construction field that don't need highly skilled workers, depressing wages for American roofers, etc.... They didn't think that it could happen to them too. Pretty soon, the only jobs left in America that pay well will be government jobs, medical jobs, and lawyers. All the rest of us will have to work in restaurants or retail if our country continues in the direction it is headed in. The other alternative is SELF-EMPLOYMENT. It used to be the norm in this country.

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