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On Mon, Mar 22, 2004 at 08:45:30PM -0500, Robert La Ferla wrote: > In 90's we were spoiled. As a result, we are now the fatted calf. There may be some truth to this, but I think we should reject this idea. Most of us became "spoiled" by investing a great deal of time and money into obtaining our skillsets. To be good at IT is often EXPENSIVE. Our employers usually demand a great commitment from us in terms of the hours we work and our availability after work (especially for us support types). This should be rewarded. Maintaining our skills so that we do not become obsolete generally requires a great expenditure of time and/or money. We deserve high salaries; we work as hard as doctors or lawyers, and obtaining our skillsets is at least as expensive. Our skills are in high demand, even if that currently means importing cheap labor. We deserve to be compensated appropriately. In my opinion, this SHOULD add up to six-figure salaries for most experienced and talented IT workers. But we're being jilted because of the availability of cheaper labor elsewhere, and dishonest businesses who abuse the system. In many cases, Indians (and others) are being paid by our government to attend our universities, in the form of financial aid. Those who don't receive money from US financial sources, as I understand it, are often paid by the Indian government to go to our schools. Then American businesses hire these workers on false pretenses, paying them less than American workers doing the same job. This does three things: 1. reduces the number of high-paying jobs available to Americans 2. causes a reduction in pays of the IT industry generally 3. Since many of these foriegn workers send a large chunk of their salaries to their home countries, it removes a lot of money from our economy, to the benefit of those other countries. If you believe in the free market system, then maybe your response to this is, "as it should be." But at the very least, you must realize that it is unquestionably detrimental to the American economy. It is worse than the case of manufacturing jobs, because these jobs are high-paying jobs, yeilding a lot of disposable income to IT workers. That income is spent directly on goods and services, fueling growth; or it is saved in financial institutions, improving the supply of money for loans to build businesses with capital expenditures. That was before. With the export of our labor, and the export of many dollars to the countries of foriegn visa workers, the economy will suffer. And it has. Outside of IT, it seems to be getting better, but I think that trend will reverse itself in about a year or so, as fewer and fewer Americans can find these high-paying jobs. -- Derek D. Martin http://www.pizzashack.org/ GPG Key ID: 0xDFBEAD02 -=-=-=-=- This message is posted from an invalid address. Replying to it will result in undeliverable mail. Sorry for the inconvenience. Thank the spammers. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.blu.org/pipermail/discuss/attachments/20040323/c367ab4b/attachment.sig>
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