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January 10, 2004

"India hands out new offshore BPO tax breaks"

India Lowers Taxes as Employment in Message and Dataprocessing Services Rises

The Indian government has introduced new tax breaks designed to head off any threat of firms withdrawing business process outsourcing (BPO) operations and moving them to cheaper offshore locations.

Do you, with the rest of us in North America, hear the 'hush, hush' in the front offices as ever more jobs are being eliminated and shipped offshore? Quote after quote cites business planners advising their colleagues to keep a low profile at home while negotiating contracts in India or China for doing work abroad at a 50% bottom-line savings compared to what you/we cost them. (The wages are often 90%-plus lower there.)

Imagine for a second that these jobs were being outsourced from the US to Canada. Call centres in the Maritimes are an example of this. Well, under these circumstances such as under the North American Free-Trade Agreement (NAFTA), you would hear shouts of indignation from Congress that three or four key factors in Canada constitute unfair competition with Americans.

The US threatens trade war with Canada in sectors where powerful interests south of the border claim that the northern neighbour is not playing ball on a level field. Softwood lumber is just the tip of the iceberg here. Trade-conflict pressure and the resolution mechanisms both put downward pressure on Canadian living standards in three key areas: a) Canada's socialized healthcare system, b) relatively higher unemployment insurance benefits, and c) federal and provincial tax breaks and incentives to entrepreneurs and owners to increase employment. (Subsidized housing and welfare would fall in here as well if both were not already greatly reduced well before NAFTA was proposed.)

In the case of BPO outsourcing to, say, India, there is not as strong an effective outcry in Congress (despite media attention and trade union whimpers and whines). One suggestion for the low profile -- the enormous savings (largely in wages) for big businesses that outsource services, data programming and related processes. In the ballpark of 50% cost reductions, it is not just a question of competition it is a question of corporate survival -- if the competition can lower significant portions of their wage bill by 50%, then "your own company" could well bite the dust, and pronto.

India and China may have to cover their own backs as potential beneficiaries for increased investment in the Business Process Outsourcing sector. Mauritius and the Philippines are starting to offer sweeter deals. But in the long haul keeping the big outsourcers happy requires the sort of social investments in education and infrastructure that the more populous and economically sophisticated nations are able to mobilize rationally.

How any commentator, and plenty of them do, could look at all this and not see the process as a thorough attack on wages in the industrialized world is beyond me. Admittedly, the whole process flows into economic development outside the Western metropole and brings jobs to the second tier. But socially BPO does not export the sort of social security system we inherited from social democratic experiments of the past. Job outsourcing is part of the destruction of the cradle-to-grave social security safety net. (You could convincingly ask whether the logic of BPO argues that Reaganite economics failed to reduce real wages low enough for the investment capitalists. Isn't the conclusion staring us in the face that the high-tech stock market bubble was a counter-productive blip on the road toward lowering wages in order to increase profits in information technology?)

It may prove interesting, though maybe it is just an exercise, to look at individuals who move from advanced industrialized nations to places like China, India or even African nations. Already you pick up anecdotal tales of Silicone Valley expats living in the Caribbean, women and men who keep their hand in the Information Technology labour market or who search out investment opportunities abroad. The reason I mention these folks as interesting is not because it seems romantic to live in the Third World. What is pertinent here is the economic shift this mobility represents and indicates.

For individuals, with the downward pressure on wages at home, one response is to relocate where things like shelter and food cost less. Well, today those places are also potential sites for outsourced jobs.

The whole process is somewhat circular. But it is also similar to the low-end phenomenon of neighbourhood gentrification. What I mean is that people picking up and moving out of continental Europe and America and carrying their high-tech employment with them (even serving as consultants and investors in innovation) are part and parcel of the attack on wages in their industry. They don't fight back (which appears impossible) but they scurry and in the process expand the opportunities for outsourcing even more jobs abroad.

In the future, it may turn out that the bodies -- the living, breathing people -- that relocate in order to lower their cost of living while keeping one hand in the Internet-connected job market constitute a new motor force for change wherever they land outside the industrialized West. It is complex, but follow one thread. We say that knowledge and information is the key to the new economy. The very simple noumenon of knowledge that the expats have learned and that they carry with them to 'foreign lands' is the knowledge that the natives newly employed in the business services for the West are being paid one-tenth of what the expat was being paid for the same work back home.

These little human encounters could be the spark that ingnites the powder keg . . .

NOTE: Since posting the above, I have seen another take on the issue. I will POST on it soon, but here is the pertinent reference:

Creative Class War http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2004/0401.florida.html

How the GOP's anti-elitism could ruin America's economy.

By Richard Florida
Washington Monthly


January 09, 2004

More on Leaking T-Viewer Polls

Public Broadcaster CBC Casts Broad with Newspeak

The public broadcaster's response? Well, it was in two parts. Yesterday's initial story quoted a spokesperson: "... she does not believe the reference to "anchor" was a shot at Mansbridge in particular. "I think it means news anchors," said spokeswoman Ruth-Ellen Soles. ... "It means The National, it means regional, it means Canada Now, it means local, it means everything," said Soles. "We have a huge news service, it probably means Newsworld, you know, everything."

Today, there was a follow-up article that cited a statement from a CBC official - which must have arrived yesterday, once they had seen the initial coverage. "Ms. Wilson said nothing in the main study suggests that CBC's anchors "especially Peter Mansbridge, are anything but a symbol of the strength of its news program." she also said the main study is "full" of compliments to CBC news anchors in general, to the The National, and "to Peter in particular."

Thanks to Canuckflack -- again.
(TrackBack URL: http://plattsburg.west-third.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/92)

Private Sector TV Leaks Dirt on National Broadcaster

Rule #1 for Research' from Canuckflack


The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, our national television and radio broadcaster, now has to slog through a few days of negative coverage because CanWest news got its hands on a document distributed to all CBC News staff last month.

Included were a cover letter from the editor in chief of CBC News, Current Affairs and Newsworld, and an executive summary of a 1000 page audience survey commissioned by the CBC.
While the survey found CBC was the only choice for some viewers who were looking for "serious" news coverage, "for others, CBC, especially The National, is stuffy, condescending, up-tight with endless pontificating experts."

Quebecor Looks at Home-Phone Market

Buy-Back from Carlyle Group

Quebecor Inc. is preparing a new start in the residential- phone market for its telephone unit, Videotron Telecom, after buying back control of the company from U.S. investment firm Carlyle Group, Quebecor said yesterday.

L'année de tous les dangers

L'année de tous les dangers

Au total, 31 journalistes ont perdu la vie dans l'exercice de leur fonction en 2003. C'est six de plus qu'en 2002.

. . . . + + + + . . . .

One of the best resumés (in French) of media news over the past year (2003).

To translate the page to the point it scans well enough to understand in English, go into the Google browser, choose Language options, then the French source to English target. Finally plug in the URL given above, and the result should be good enough to understand. This tip should work wherever the URL is stable on the web.

Primus : Téléphonie Internet

Primus lance son service de téléphone Internet

La téléphone résidentielle par Internet a officiellement pris son envol au Canada et au Québec, hier, avec l'introduction du service par Primus Canada. L'arrivéé de ce premier joueur Internet dans la téléphonie locale pourrait mettre de la pression sur les cablodistributeurs.

Primus Canada, une filiale 100 % de la société publique amércaine Primus Telecommunication, offrira le téléphone pour 19,95 $ par mois, une économie de 25 % sur le tarif actuel des Bell, Telus et autres compagnies de tétéphone.

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Vidéotron Telecommunications-(Québécor) will offer a similar service soon. POSTed above from the English website, the company spokesperson states that (before tooling up for the Internet phone business) the company had to buy out the 30% share owned by the Carlyle Group.

Just the name Carlyle Group will ring bells with news hounds who have traced the connection between the Bush family interests and the Ben Laden family investments. I have no idea what you could make of this Québec connection. After all, we are in the realm of global enterprise in telephony and Internet technology. What would you expect, a mom-and-pop operation involving only nationals clustered within one border or another?

(I do know conspiracy-theory buffs who will make ALL the connections and am certain that we have not heard the end of it yet. If they link Carlyle Group to Power Corporation, the thread goes directly to Canada Steamship Lines, to Maurice Strong, to PM Paul Martin . . . A hop skip and a jump and the entire foreign policy of Canada is determined by the Club of Rome.

This is not so funny, I know, but realistically speaking, why not start with, oh, say . . Canada's substantial role in Afghanistan today or Canada's role in influencing civil society in Haiti, where a 48-hour general strike is underway as I write this?

(To translate this article enough to read it in English, follow the tip in the last POST on how to use the Google language tool.)

Insult and Injury in Lusaka

Clarke Profile: White Zambian Writer Facing Deportation

follow-up on previous post on Anything Prose

In the 40-odd years since, Clarke has worked as a teacher, an administrator, and finally, in his 50s, a journalist. "My dear wife didn't want to go to Britain, which is a terribly racist place. I could see her point. It was far better for me to be a white man in Zambia than for her to be a black woman in Britain. This opinion has held quite well for 35 years; I may now have to reconsider."

In spite of recent improvements, and benefiting hugely from comparison to Zimbabwe to the south, Zambia is not a happy place.

This is why, when the president made a pre-Christmas address congratulating his government on another excellent year, Clarke felt moved to protest. Out of a population of 10 million, more than a million people have HIV; 80% live below the poverty line and life expectancy at birth hovers around 35. "It left people a bit gobsmacked," says Clarke. "I thought that if there was a lot of prosperity somewhere, perhaps we would find it in the Mfuwe gamepark." The column sent up the government as a pack of duplicitous jungle animals, taking the Zambian people for fools.

"Just as the [humans] are becoming thinner," he wrote, in the voice of the elephant president, "so we in the game park are becoming fatter. As hospitals fall down in the rest of the country, so we are building veterinary clinics all over Mfuwe ... by closing schools, we now have the funds to send our monkeys abroad to Harvard. They are studying for MBAs, degrees in Manipulating Budget Allocations."

LIBERIA: LURD Commanders Falling Out -- as 'Always Before'

LIBERIA: LURD commanders want leader replaced by his wife - OCHA IRIN

Forty commanders of Liberia's main rebel group, the Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) have signed a statement calling for the replacement of LURD chairman Sekou Damate Conneh by his influential wife, Aisha Keita Conneh.

Diplomats say she has a great deal of influence with Guinean President Lansana Conte, who for the past four years has been LURD's main backer. She is reputed to be Conte's personal fortune teller.

(Thanks to mostlyafrica.blogspot.com for this link.)

Cathy Buckle Posts from Zimbabwe

The March Backwards
Saturday, 8th November 2003

Dear Family and Friends,

A Canadian friend and passionate believer in democracy recently gave me a subscription to the Guardian Weekly and what a delight it is to be able to read "real news" from the "real world" every week.

Recently there was a report on how the lives of subsistence farmers in Kenya are being dramatically improved thanks to research into how chemical signals from different grasses attract parasitic wasps.The wasps then eat maize borer moths and the result is a dramatic increase in crop yields. The added bonus comes from the grasses which started the process as they then provide lush grazing for dairy cows which produce more and better milk. Reports such as this one shouldn't bring tears to my eyes but they do because with every passing day Zimbabwe is not only being left behind but is also racing back to the dark ages.

Just three years and ten months ago, before our political madness began, Zimbabwe was also involved in amazing research which was going to change the face of agriculture and dramatically improve lives. Companion growing and intercropping was becoming a widespread practice. Massive field trials were being conducted into minimum or zero tillage to improve yields and boost soil quality. Farmers were growing huge fields of flowers for their essential, healing and aromatic oils.

Others were growing crops like castor beans whose oil is used in the chemical and plastics industries and others a bushy shrub whose oil was set to replace diesel as a fuel source for motor vehicles. All of this has now gone. The farmers are forbidden from the lands on which the crops were grown and the specialists, scientists, engineers and technicians have left or are leaving the country as the entire economic structure of Zimbabwe falls apart. Decades of painstaking research and huge advances in agricultural diversity have now been completely destroyed and largely replaced by primitive scratch farming which is now almost the only thing to see on Zimbabwe's looted and seized farms.

Agriculture is not the only thing going backwards in Zimbabwe and lately the march into the past seems to have accelerated into almost every aspect of day to day living. We now have a huge crisis with water in some of our towns and cities. This morning our one and only propaganda radio station read out a list of suburbs in the capital city which are going to be subjected to regular 24 hour periods without water because there isn't enough clean water to meet the demands.

In Marondera our water in the last fortnight has alternated between clear, milky and dark brown and there is no one in authority able to offer an explanation or solution. Night after night our town is being hit by men who go street by street disconnecting and stealing water meters. On the night mine was stolen, 12 others in surrounding streets also went. The roads were awash from broken pipes and over a month later our town council have still done nothing whatsoever to even effect temporary repairs. Our mains water pipes are still joined together by desperate householders with bits of garden hosepipe and rubber strapping.

(See also Cathy's commentary in her Saturday, 15th November, 2003
letter explaining why the Mugabe government subsidized the squatters and veterans to remain on her farm.)

In those 7 months I saw at first hand what was going on. There was not a shadow of doubt in my mind then that our land had been squatted not because we were white but because a political party was desperate to stay in power and that we were merely scapegoats.

January 08, 2004

'Citizen Conrad' & Friends

Beyond Rosebud & Roosevelt
+ + + + via www.StraightGoods.ca from NY Times

Lord Black kept on payroll William Buckley, George Will and others who share his political views

Dateline: Monday, January 05, 2004
by Paul Krugman, NY Times
Published: December 23, 2003

We're now learning that Lord Black also used his control of Hollinger to reward friends, including journalists, who share his political views...

The real surprise, though, is that two prominent journalists, William Buckley and George Will, were also regular paid advisors to Hollinger. Now, I thought there were rules here. First, if you're a full-time journalist, you shouldn't be in that kind of relationship. Second, whoever you are, if you write a favorable article about someone with whom you have a personal or financial connection — like Mr. Perle's piece on the tanker deal or Mr. Will's March column praising Lord Black's wisdom — you disclose that connection. But I guess the old rules no longer apply....

Original NY Times Article
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I can get you a great deal on some nice property in London and Miami. The Coral Gables estate of Black is worth every penny of US $ 33 million. The London mansion is a little more than half that. Conrad Black has put them up for sale, probably to pay back Hollinger for money they want back as unauthorized transfers. Or perhaps he needs the money to pay fines the SEC will impose on him.

Check all of this out in The Montreal Gazette today.