Striking workers carry placards past cranes sitting idle by shipping containers Dec. 4, 2012, at the Port of Los Angeles.(Photo: Robyn Beck, AFP/Getty Images)
The strike that crippled two of the nation's busiest shipping ports
was settled this week, but the trend it spotlighted - the offshoring of
service jobs - is expected to continue to grow across the USA.
The
eight-day walkout by clerical workers at the ports of Los Angeles and
Long Beach largely centered on the outsourcing of their jobs overseas
and elsewhere in the U.S., says Craig Merrilees, a spokesman for the
International Longshore and Warehouse Union. Shippers denied outsourcing
jobs, but the tentative settlement restricts the practice, according to
the Associated Press.
Yet service companies have been
sending jobs abroad in large numbers the past decade to cut labor costs -
a trend that accelerated in the recession and is expected to continue
the next few years before slowing after 2016. About 663,000
large-company jobs in information technology, human resources, finance
and purchasing - the category that includes the port workers - have been
offshored since 2002, according to The Hackett Group.
By
2016, the consulting firm estimates, another 375,000 jobs in the sectors
will be moved abroad. More than a third of the U.S. jobs in those
industries in 2002 will have moved offshore by 2016.
Most workers
are employed directly by companies that previously used U.S. staffers,
though some work for outsourcing firms. Hackett studied companies with
at least $1 billion in annual revenue, noting they represent about 75%
of the offshoring market.
India is the largest offshoring center. Service jobs also have gone to eastern Europe, the Philippines, China and Mexico.
In
other sectors, initially low-level jobs were offshored, such as
handling payroll or tracking purchase orders. Employers typically can
cut labor costs by about 75%, Dorr says. In recent years, a growing
number of higher-level jobs have moved overseas, such as benefits
analysis and vendor management, though the cost savings for offshoring
those positions is only about 25%.The trend took off after companies
began contracting with programmers in India to help with the massive
preparations for the Y2K computer bug in 2000, says Hackett research
director Erik Dorr.
"Organizations now feel more
comfortable moving up the value chain," Dorr says, noting, for example,
that India's education system is improving and turning out top-notch job
candidates.
Since 2005, legal services such as document
review, contract drafting and regulatory communication increasingly have
been offshored, particularly to India, says Greg McPolin, managing
director of Pangea3, a legal outsourcing firm. Indian attorneys handle
work that in the U.S. is sometimes done by paralegals and at a 40% to
60% cost savings, he says.
Several thousand legal jobs have
been offshored, estimates Edward Brooks, founder of The LPO Program, a
legal consulting firm.
"In the current environment, it is more important than ever that ...
the support we provide to clients adds value without adding unnecessary
cost," law firm Clifford Chance said in a statement.
Once
services are offshored, there's little chance they'll come back to the
U.S., Dorr says. By contrast, manufacturers have returned some
production to the U.S. recently, largely because of a narrowing wage gap
between the U.S. and China, rising shipping costs and falling U.S.
energy costs - factors that generally haven't affected service jobs.
One exception: call-center jobs. About 500,000 were offshored from
2006 to 2010, according to the Communications Workers of America. Many
have returned to the U.S. the last few years because of cultural gaps
between representatives and customers that hurt sales, says Hal Sirkin,
senior partner of Boston Consulting Group.
Yet CWA spokeswoman Candice Johnson called the jobs that have come back "a drop in the bucket."
USA Today