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High tech job flight threatens our security and prosperity.


The dramatically quickening quickening /quick·en·ing/ (kwik´en-ing) the first perceptible movement of the fetus in the uterus.

quick·en·ing
n.
 flight overseas of high tech and professional jobs represents the ultimate betrayal Betrayal
See also Treachery.

Judas Iscariot

apostle who betrays Jesus. [N.T.: Matthew 26:15]

Proteus

though engaged, steals his friend Valentine’s beloved, reveals his plot and effects his banishment. [Br.
 of American workers by current U.S. trade and globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 policies. At risk are Americans' future livelihoods, our country's world technological leadership, and thus our national security.

During the 1990s tech boom, globalization supporters confidently made a promise to Americans: If they seized new opportunities to retrain re·train  
tr. & intr.v. re·trained, re·train·ing, re·trains
To train or undergo training again.



re·train
 and re-skill themselves, they could stay ahead of global competition, easily move from vanishing smokestack manufacturing to the better paying "industries of the future."

Yet in the next decade, literally millions of jobs in fields ranging from software engineering to financial analysis to accounting and even government record processing are likely to move to low-wage countries like India. And the technological knowhow to make the world's most advanced products--including weapons--will move with them.

Even during the tech boom, the globalizers' promise rang hollow. For example, though growing rapidly, the total number of technology and professional jobs remained meager mea·ger also mea·gre  
adj.
1. Deficient in quantity, fullness, or extent; scanty.

2. Deficient in richness, fertility, or vigor; feeble: the meager soil of an eroded plain.

3.
. And existing retraining re·train  
tr. & intr.v. re·trained, re·train·ing, re·trains
To train or undergo training again.



re·train
 programs had a dismal dis·mal  
adj.
1. Causing gloom or depression; dreary: dismal weather; took a dismal view of the economy.

2.
 record. The globalizing of even the choicest occupations, however, shows that even overcoming these obstacles won't bring economic security. It also discourages young Americans from studying science and technology, and refilling our national talent pool.

High tech and professional job flight is often defended as a natural outcome of economic evolution. Yet it usually stems from specific U.S. trade policies that encourage American companies to supply the U.S. market from penny-wage labor countries. Indeed, once blue-collar manufacturing production work was offshored during 1980s and 1990s manufacturing's white-collar jobs were sure to follow once technology permitted. After all, why keep these functions thousands of miles apart? Numerous service providers can duplicate this business model, too.

But if trade policies have promoted these practices, then trade policies can end them. Washington must encourage U.S. manufacturing and service companies to supply the U.S. market from facilities at home. Our technology future and all its economic and security benefits can only be Made in America.
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Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 9, 2004
Words:332
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