The Corporate Abandonment of America
by Jim Hightower
Something major is taking place in our country that corporate
chieftains don't want us talking about: Jobless creep.
It's no longer blue-collar families that are seeing their jobs hauled
offshore to faraway havens of low-wage production. Now it's hundreds
of thousands (and soon to be millions) of well-paying white-collar and
high-tech jobs that are being shipped overseas by America's
wage-busting CEOs and joblessness is creeping quietly but relentlessly
upward, ensnaring families that previously thought they were solidly
entrenched in the upper reaches of the middle class.
CEOs are paranoid about any public discussion of this explosive
movement, but internally they giddily exult at the prospect of
essentially abandoning our country and its middle-class in order to
fatten their profits on foreign workers. IBM, which is leading the
way, even has coined a corporate euphemism for moving more and more of
its white-collar jobs out of the country: "Global sourcing." The rush
is on. A Microsoft executive has instructed department heads in this
software giant to "Think India" and to "pick something to move
offshore today."
This is deliberate job destruction, but it is also much more =96 it's
an open assault on America's middle-class and on America's unifying
social ethic that "we're all in this together."
Corporate executives and their apologists say that this is simply the
immutable workings of the market and that, after all, the CEO's sole
responsibility is to enrich the bottom line of top shareholders, with
no obligation to an American middle class.
Fine... but if CEOs have no obligation to us, why should we feel any
obligation to them? As they separate themselves and their corporate
fortunes from the well-being of our families, communities, and
country, we should begin to separate them from the special tax breaks,
enormous subsidies, regulatory favors, political privileges and all
other advantages they've gotten from us. |