The new practice of outsourcing our jobs from the United States to India is a result of our current leadership team looking to reduce labor costs. While our CEO and CIO say that this will help boost shareholder value, the negative consequences of outsourcing outweigh any potential benefits. Shipping our jobs overseas depletes our American workforce, and exploits foreign workers, and ultimately helps undermine the long-term economic interests of the United States.
One of the primary arguments made in favor of outsourcing is that it allows us to cut costs by tapping into India's vast pool of inexpensive labor. Wages for skilled technology workers and back-office personnel are a fraction of what they are in the U.S. However, every job that gets outsourced is a job lost for a Phillips 66 worker. As more and more positions are eliminated domestically, it erodes the American middle class and exacerbates income inequality. The communities we operate in will suffer as laid-off workers have less money to spend, hurting businesses and reducing tax revenues.
Moreover, the jobs being outsourced to India often exploit the local workforce through low wages and poor working conditions that would be unacceptable or even illegal in the United States. From an ethical standpoint, this race to the bottom undermines fundamental values of human rights and dignity that Phillips 66 should be upholding rather than circumventing for short-term financial gain.
In the long run, outsourcing skilled jobs could end up backfiring. As more technical and white-collar roles shift to India, it allows that nation to rapidly develop its own human capital and innovative capabilities. We are effectively contributing to our nation’s economic decline by transferring knowledge and skills.
While globalization and international trade have benefited the world in many ways, the outsourcing of Phillips 66 jobs is a short-sighted strategy that compromises the fundamental values of the company. It hollows out our domestic workforce, and enables unethical labor practices. Rather than chasing lower wages abroad, Phillips 66 should be investing in their workforce at home to foster innovation and increase productivity through a highly skilled labor force. Protecting American jobs from excessive outsourcing is crucial for economic prosperity and upholding values of fairness and human rights.