The political economy of outsourcing

[UPDATE TO MSNBC READERS: If you’re interested in all of my outsourcing posts, click here] Virginia Postrel has two posts up today on the political economy of outsourcing. The first post appears to reflect the limited power of danieldrezner.com: As a faithful reader of Dan Drezner’s blog, I knew about Catherine Mann’s important policy paper ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

[UPDATE TO MSNBC READERS: If you're interested in all of my outsourcing posts, click here] Virginia Postrel has two posts up today on the political economy of outsourcing. The first post appears to reflect the limited power of danieldrezner.com:

[UPDATE TO MSNBC READERS: If you’re interested in all of my outsourcing posts, click here] Virginia Postrel has two posts up today on the political economy of outsourcing. The first post appears to reflect the limited power of danieldrezner.com:

As a faithful reader of Dan Drezner’s blog, I knew about Catherine Mann’s important policy paper on the future of info-tech outsourcing (.pdf download here) almost as soon as it came out. I somehow assumed everyone else did too, equating blog awareness with widespread media coverage. Then I met Mann… and I also learned that Dan’s blog and the New York Sun pretty much accounted for all the press attention the paper had gotten. So I devoted my latest NYT column to Mann’s work.

Two thoughts: first, to be fair, Bruce Bartlett also picked up on the Mann study. Second, Virginia, you’re one of the people that helps translates blog awareness to wider media coverage. Counterintuitive ideas don’t travel without your help!! Postrel’s column expands upon the Mann study I discussed here. Some good parts:

Compared with the end of 1999, which was still a good time for programmers, December 2003 data show a 14 percent increase in business and financial occupations, a 6 percent increase in computer and mathematical jobs, and a 2 percent drop in architecture and engineering jobs. New programming jobs may be springing up in India, but they aren’t canceling out job growth in the United States…. These projections aren’t much comfort, of course, to unemployed programmers. While their skills may be in demand, Dr. Mann explains, those jobs may be in new industries – a hospital, for instance, rather than at I.B.M. – and therefore be harder to find. Or programmers may need new training to move into systems integration jobs.

Read all of it. Later in the post, Postrel criticizes Glenn Reynolds for hyping the outsourcing meme. Glenn responds here. [UPDATE: Virginia responds to the response.] Meanwhile, Virginia’s other post follows up on Paul Craig Roberts. Outsourcing opponents have embraced him as one of their own since he co-authored an op-ed with New York Senator Chuck Schumer in the New York Times last month. Eugene Volokh gets to the root causes of Roberts’ protectionist rhetoric. It’s not a pretty picture. That said, it would be equally unfair to assume that everyone who agrees with Roberts about outsourcing shares the same root causes. Thirty years ago, Roberts was a supply-side nutball. He’s just morphed into a protectionist nutball. [UPDATE: Tyler Cowen defends some of Roberts’ earlier work.]

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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