After reading this rather hefty thread again(
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x3686631) I am reminded of a possible way that outsourcing/offshoring might be addressed in a constructive and creative manner. I assure you, I thought this up all by my lonesome.
It is no secret that many of the jobs that large corporations are sending overseas are jobs that were created through tax breaks and credits, utility giveaways, and other emoluments doled out by every level of government. Now, in a rapacious urge to increase profits and "enhance shareholder value"(shareholders=executives), they send these jobs offshore and bloat the rolls of the unemployed. With no end in site.
Now, when you or I do something that is of detriment to larger society, we face consequences. The list of sanctions is long and sometimes terrible in their effect. On the other hand, although corporations are rewarded for the creation of jobs through all of the emoluments, provided by government and listed above, they face no real consequences when they destroy jobs and send them overseas. All they receive is a reward from Wall Street, when their ratings and stock prices go up. This is no way to run a goat rodeo.
But it can change, with some political will.
What I propose is that with rewards come responsibilities and with the abrogation of responsibilities should come penalties. When a company announces that they are destroying jobs in the US, to send them overseas, then that should be the time that state and federal labor departments should step in, assess the amount, in dollars, that these companies have received over the years in these special breaks, count back to the beginning, add market rate interest to that dollar amount, and if the company is not going bankrupt, assess that penalty against the corporation, under the penalty of hard asset forfeiture and criminal sanctions, should they not pay. All assessed penalties to be put into a locked pool to be used to create new jobs.
In this way, corporations will be forced to face the consequence of their actions and think twice about being dedicated followers of fashion(for that is what drives a lot of the offshoring), and perhaps the tide will be stemmed, a bit, and new jobs will start to be created.
It is well past time for this nation to put some sting in its response to outsourcing/offshoring jobs. There must be consequences for economically destructive actions. If there aren't, then stop calling this a nation of laws.