Fascinating article in today’s NYT, which can be summed up in a single line: India is outsourcing outsourcing.

Key quote:
One of the constants of the global economy has been companies moving their tasks — and jobs — to India. But rising wages and a stronger currency here, demands for workers who speak languages other than English, and competition from countries looking to emulate India’s success as a back office — including China, Morocco and Mexico — are challenging that model.

There are at least a dozen countries mentioned in this article - China, Morocco, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Portugal, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Czech Republic, Thailand, Poland, Philippines. All of them are getting in on the back-office outsourcing game. And yet, there is no mention of Bangladesh. You would think that there would be the minimum IT/language competencies in Bangladesh to claim a slice of this outsourcing pie. But it doesn’t appear to be the case, at least from this article. This, in and of itself, deserves a post asking just where our political/economic leadership has failed that we must struggle to attract investment and jobs against the likes of Romania and Morocco. Where are they today, those cultural ‘leaders’ and political panderers who used to beat the jingoistic drum of Shorbo-starey bangla chai and who in the process denied entire generations of young Bangladeshis the access to English which would have allowed them to compete on a level playing field?

With the bottlenecks that India is running up against, any nation that shows initiative and provides the environment for the outsourcing business can expect to be richly rewarded. And yet, as ever our bosses are asleep at the wheel. 30 years after the garments industry took off, how far up the value ladder have we been able to climb?