Politicians propose punitive solution to loss of US jobs

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In a move designed to make US companies think twice about sending jobs overseas, a group of politicians is proposing a novel way to punish them for it.

A new bill, drafted by Socialist legislator Bernard Sanders and backed by a few dozen Democrats and Republicans, would slap limits on federal grants to companies that fire US workers and hire replacements abroad.

"People who are working in technology jobs know the threat to their jobs right now," said Sanders spokesman Joel Barkin. "They've seen their jobs going over to India by the hundreds of thousands, if not millions. What this legislation would do is encourage these companies to think twice before shipping over these technology jobs."

The proposed Defending American Jobs Act, introduced on Wednesday, requires federal agencies that provide grants or loan guarantees to businesses to obtain reports on the number of employees those companies have inside and outside the United States, and on how much each group is being paid. One year after the bill becomes law, which is unlikely to happen this year, grant or loan recipients would be required to disclose how many domestic employees have been laid off as a proportion of the company's total global work force.

Here's the catch: if more US workers than foreign workers received the ax, the company would be "ineligible for further assistance" until it started hiring American employees again.

It's unclear what the measure's prospects are. To be enacted, it would need the support of the House Republican leadership.

"The Republican leadership is corporately owned and only interested in the interests of corporate America and their campaign contributors," Barkin acknowledged. "Do I see them being supportive? Unlikely. On the other hand, I think we'll see many, many [supporters] on both sides of the aisle, simply because people are going home to their districts and seeing that people's lives are being ruined by our trade policies."

The current US unemployment rate of around 5.7 percent is not especially high by historical standards. But a growing unease among white-collar workers has turned the topic of offshore outsourcing into a potent election-year issue, with presumptive Democratic nominee John Kerry denouncing "Benedict Arnold" chief executives in stump speeches. One report this week, however, claimed that Kerry has received $370,000 (£202,856) in campaign contributions from those same companies.

A few Republicans, including libertarian firebrand Ron Paul support the bill. A related proposal, which would restrict offshore outsourcing of government work, has been introduced in the US Senate.

Talkback

The companies say that want to send out the jobs say that places like China ad India have advantagge over America when it comes to math and science. Then what does that tell you about America's educations compared to the others??? Will that harm us in the long run??? Why dont we concentrate on the education of America???Kinda scary

via Facebook 21 March, 2004 03:22
Reply

Jeanine's comment about American education is a grammatical nightmare. Add mastery of the english language as another reason why American companies wish to outsource to China and India.

via Facebook 22 March, 2004 13:31
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