Is Thomas Friedman right?


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Loyalty & Respect
Average Is Over, Part II
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: August 7, 2012 406 Comments


A big mismatch exists today between how U.S. C.E.O.’s look at the world and how many American politicians and parents look at the world — and it may be preventing us from taking our education challenge as seriously as we must.


For many politicians, “outsourcing†is a four-letter word because it involves jobs leaving “here†and going “there.†But for many C.E.O.’s, outsourcing is over. In today’s seamlessly connected world, there is no “out†and no “in†anymore. There is only the “good,†“better†and “best†places to get work done, and if they don’t tap into the best, most cost-efficient venue wherever that is, their competition will.

For politicians, it’s all about “made in America,†but, for C.E.O.’s, it is increasingly about “made in the world†— a world where more and more products are now imagined everywhere, designed everywhere, manufactured everywhere in global supply chains and sold everywhere. American politicians are still citizens of our states and cities, while C.E.O.’s are increasingly citizens of the world, with mixed loyalties. For politicians, all their customers are here; for C.E.O.’s, 90 percent of their new customers are abroad. The credo of the politician today is: “Why are you not hiring more people here?†The credo of the C.E.O. today is: “You only hire someone — anywhere — if you absolutely have to,†if a smarter machine, robot or computer program is not available.

Yes, this is a simplification, but the trend is accurate. The trend is that for more and more jobs, average is over. Thanks to the merger of, and advances in, globalization and the information technology revolution, every boss now has cheaper, easier access to more above-average software, automation, robotics, cheap labor and cheap genius than ever before. So just doing a job in an average way will not return an average lifestyle any longer. Yes, I know, that’s what they said about the Japanese “threat†in the 1980s. But Japan, alas, challenged just two American industries — cars and consumer electronics — and just one American town, Detroit. Globalization and the Internet/telecom/computing revolution together challenge every town, worker and job. There is no good job today that does not require more and better education to get it, hold it or advance in it.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/08/o...ge-is-over-part-ii-.html?src=me&ref=general#h[YtiTin,8]
 
Average Is Over, Part II
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: August 7, 2012 406 Comments


A big mismatch exists today between how U.S. C.E.O.’s look at the world and how many American politicians and parents look at the world — and it may be preventing us from taking our education challenge as seriously as we must.


For many politicians, “outsourcing” is a four-letter word because it involves jobs leaving “here” and going “there.” But for many C.E.O.’s, outsourcing is over. In today’s seamlessly connected world, there is no “out” and no “in” anymore. There is only the “good,” “better” and “best” places to get work done, and if they don’t tap into the best, most cost-efficient venue wherever that is, their competition will.

For politicians, it’s all about “made in America,” but, for C.E.O.’s, it is increasingly about “made in the world” — a world where more and more products are now imagined everywhere, designed everywhere, manufactured everywhere in global supply chains and sold everywhere. American politicians are still citizens of our states and cities, while C.E.O.’s are increasingly citizens of the world, with mixed loyalties. For politicians, all their customers are here; for C.E.O.’s, 90 percent of their new customers are abroad. The credo of the politician today is: “Why are you not hiring more people here?” The credo of the C.E.O. today is: “You only hire someone — anywhere — if you absolutely have to,” if a smarter machine, robot or computer program is not available.

Yes, this is a simplification, but the trend is accurate. The trend is that for more and more jobs, average is over. Thanks to the merger of, and advances in, globalization and the information technology revolution, every boss now has cheaper, easier access to more above-average software, automation, robotics, cheap labor and cheap genius than ever before. So just doing a job in an average way will not return an average lifestyle any longer. Yes, I know, that’s what they said about the Japanese “threat” in the 1980s. But Japan, alas, challenged just two American industries — cars and consumer electronics — and just one American town, Detroit. Globalization and the Internet/telecom/computing revolution together challenge every town, worker and job. There is no good job today that does not require more and better education to get it, hold it or advance in it.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/08/o...ge-is-over-part-ii-.html?src=me&ref=general#h[YtiTin,8]

Good read thanks for posting. Speaks volumes about our workforce/unemployment issues across our country.
 



What folks don't realize is the same rich folks who put Obama in office that paid a high price for him now are voting republican to get him out of office paying the same high price. Only the common man falls for this trick. Rich people only care about rich people who can make them richer. Plus they don't really care about other rich people, it is their money and what it can do or do for them they care about.
 
What folks don't realize is the same rich folks who put Obama in office that paid a high price for him now are voting republican to get him out of office paying the same high price. Only the common man falls for this trick. Rich people only care about rich people who can make them richer. Plus they don't really care about other rich people, it is their money and what it can do or do for them they care about.

Lol, they couldn't trust McCain with the economy lol. Romney is their type of guy though.
 
They don't really like Romney, they just want Obama out because he has new friends. :emlaugh: The rich wants to keep getting rich. They are just using what ever sucker they can use until this economy comes back. When it does, man ole man, if you are prepared you are gonna be in either three places, the rich boy club, the half way rich club, or poorer than what you started club. :lol: Companies are making more money, paying less benefits than ever in history.
Lol, they couldn't trust McCain with the economy lol. Romney is their type of guy though.
 
They don't really like Romney, they just want Obama out because he has new friends. :emlaugh: The rich wants to keep getting rich. They are just using what ever sucker they can use until this economy comes back. When it does, man ole man, if you are prepared you are gonna be in either three places, the rich boy club, the half way rich club, or poorer than what you started club. :lol: Companies are making more money, paying less benefits than ever in history.

Globalization man..... I am preparing myself personally. I know my two biggest weaknesses, lack of a foreign language and international experience. I am working on those. Europe and Asia will be visited in the next few years. I got a bunch of stuff on my before 35 list.

Your generation got lucky Cee, my generation is being slapped with the reality of what globalization means the generation after me is losing. When countries like Brazil fully stand up, it is going to get ugly around this joint. Wait till your drive thru orders are being taken by a call center in Banglore.
 
Pops, my friends laughed at me in 98/99 when I told them to be prepared and start looking into having side businesses or hustles before the economy busted. They were so caught up in the corporate title and jobs. Now they looking crazy recovering. I didn't have to read a book to tell me that. I lived and grew up with Ronald Regan the program destroyer. I started early because I knew the tide wasn't gonna roll for ever. Now I am waiting for the next big boom to retire early.
 
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