Summary
Natasha had a "dream job." She was making $90,000 a year with a well-known handheld computer maker. In her 12 years with the company she traveled abroad to train the company's new team. And yet, despite repeated promises that her job was safe, she was laid off and unemployed for months.
Natasha's story is not unique. From 2002-2003 alone, at least 750,000 high-tech workers across the United States shared similar stories. When you include other industries like manufacturing (where jobs are eliminated entirely when real estate sales decline), the number of jobs Americans lose out on every year is astounding.See the full content of this document
Extract
Outsourcing a Threat to Labor Force
Outsourcing is one of many issues discussed during my annual Labor Breakfast. Labor leaders are invited to discuss issues confronting working families,...
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