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- Newsgroups: sci.engr
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!cbnewsc!cbfsb!cbnewsf.cb.att.com!rizzo
- From: rizzo@cbnewsf.cb.att.com (anthony.r.rizzo)
- Subject: Re: I don't want to keep looking for new jobs.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.194434.1455@cbfsb.cb.att.com>
- Sender: news@cbfsb.cb.att.com
- Organization: AT&T
- References: <1gt3n6INNko5@access.usask.ca>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 19:44:34 GMT
- Lines: 57
-
- In article <1gt3n6INNko5@access.usask.ca> choy@skorpio.usask.ca (I am a terminator.) writes:
- >The latest issue of Spectrum discusses the conversion of engineers from
- >military work to civilian work. One of the articles says that
- >many engineers could go through 10-12 jobs in a lifetime. Companies tend
- >to contract work out so engineers can't expect to work in a stable
- >company. They have to learn to manage themselves and go around looking
- >for work. Having to look for work every few years is a royal pain in the
- >ass. Upper management should be getting enough work to keep their
- >engineers employed. There's a few engineering firms in town. They bid
- >on contracts and employ engineers to grind out the details. An
- >engineering friend of mine was laid off from one such company because it
- >didn't have enough work to do. Now my friend has gone out and found
- >people wanting to contract work out. What's this big company doing?
- >It's gotten so big that it doesn't even know how to get work. They just
- >bury themselves with paperwork and legal matters.
- >
- >Henry Choy
- >choy@cs.usask.ca
-
-
- Get used to it!
-
- The days of a career track in engineering are just about over.
- Now, engineering offers jobs, nothing more. And it ain't getting
- any better. Companies have been shifting manufacturing jobs
- across the borders and overseas for years. That trend is increasing,
- not decreasing. It won't be long before most of the engineering
- goes overseas too. Some of it is already there. People
- in other countries, it seems, have comparable education and
- can do the work just as well as we can. The only difference
- seems to be that they are currently willing to do it for much less.
-
- Other costs are less too, for the companies. Some countries have
- socialized medicine. So, companies don't have to pay for medical
- insurance. But the real driving force is the cost of labor,
- and I include engineers in this. Labor costs are simply less
- overseas.
-
- The only way for you and me to maintain our standard of
- living is to be able to do things that the overseas types can't do.
- Maybe we can get an edge somehow.
-
- The government should play a role here too. The government,
- if it really represented the people and not the special interests,
- would see to it that the local labor force looked more attractive
- to corporations (American AND foreign). It can do this in a number
- of ways. For example, it can offer tax credits to firms that
- employ Americans in America. Foreign governments do it, and it works.
- One example of this is the newly built GM plant, in Canada.
- The Canadian government kidded in the equivalent of about $100M
- in the form of tax breaks. As a result, thousands of GM workers
- and engineers, and thousands more employed by the smaller companies
- that supplied the GM plant, are looking for work.
-
- See you in the unemployment line.
-
- Tony Rizzo (att.com!hogpb!rizzo)
-