The MGS Blog

Monday, June 28, 2021

Comment on clamouring to re-shore production

'This article focuses on the ongoing inflation debate. What caught my eye is the reference to reshoring as an inflation risk, "But that doesn’t rule out a very different form of global cost-push inflation – namely, the confluence of supply-chain congestion (think semiconductors) and protectionist clamoring to reshore production."'

An observation courtesy of Michael Murphy - National Delegate - FP7 Security at Enterprise Ireland

The Ghost of Arthur Burns https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/fed-sanguine-inflation-view-recalls-arthur-burns-by-stephen-s-roach-2021-05 

The line at the end, protectionist clamouring to re-shore production, is the note I will comment on. The simplistic nativist splendid isolation world view is based on a belief that national sovereignty trumps trade and international commerce. Under this view each national economy is a closed system of consumption and production, ideally independent and isolated from others. It holds the false belief that commerce with/in the world, with 'outside' nations can be a one-way street, that the my sovereignty can gain access to outside finance, markets, technologies, knowledge without reciprocating in turn to your sovereignty. It is a profoundly narrow, reductionist and dangerous outlook that ignores both externalities (consider the environment and the climate disaster) and inherent efficiencies, some places are just better at some things than others (tropical fruit, pelagic fish, manufacturing semiconductors). Further, it devalues the global good of diversity of cultural distinction (music, language, arts etc) - difference is exotic, expanding, and valuable.

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

2021 white paper from Comarch on ICT services outsourcing

A 2021 white paper from Comarch, an outsourcing services supplier, gives a detailed breakdown of their view of the top five destinations for outsourcing, including India and China, but also Ukraine and Poland, and includes the disciplines each region particularly excels in and the regulatory regimes they operate under.

https://www.comarch.com

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Reflecting on "Gravity" versus "Weightless" trade models

Chris Grey includes a brief exposition on the fallacy of political actors claiming the emergence of a new “post-geography trading world” (political dogma than a trade model as such) (link to Brexit limps on post of Fri 23 April 21)
"Munchau also regurgitates the idea that modern economies are becoming all about data trade (i.e. the ‘weightless economy’ mantra that’s been around for decades) and makes the claim that gravity models of trade (i.e. that geographical distance matters) only apply to goods trade. The latter has long been a favourite idea amongst Brexiters, such as former International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, who talk of a ‘post-geography trading world’, but it is largely incorrect."

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

Freelancing crowdsourcing

Digital platform companies in the mediated freelancing microwork space include Upwork (rebranded merged entity Elance-oDesk). Uber, MTurk, Deliveroo and others.

So we’re talking about platforms, more formally, 2-sided platforms. These platforms act as mediators between those who want a service, and those who can deliver a service. There are risks to actors on both sides of the platform aren’t there? Risks to both micro-workers and (presumably) the micro-employers

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Provisions against outsourcing

 The provisions of the proposals for '"Building Momentum": A new public service agreement, 2021-2022' retains protections for public sector workers that act as a counterweight to employer attempts to outsourcing work to 3rd parties. The employer must...

"...present a `business case' if they want to outsource a service or part of a service and... to consult with staff representatives. Crucially, employers are forbidden to include labour costs in any business case."

Source:  Proposals for "Building Momentum": A new public service agreement, 2021-2022, SIPTU

Saturday, January 16, 2021

A post from The Reg "Offshoring is kind of over..."

Claims that "offshoring is kind of over, says Wipro, as financials surge thanks to offshoring"
Yet the whole basis for the article is that business is booming with distributed multi-sited multi-national work systems...

Friday, January 15, 2021

Still current, still true - the problems of outsourcing and how to solve them

An article by InVerita via Medium

#1 Data security risk
#2 Not planning your budget ahead
#3 Time zone difference
#4 Language and cultural barriers
#5 Inability to see the whole scope of the project
#6 Unclear delivery expectations
#7 Quantity, not quality
#8 Buying a pig in a poke
#9 You don’t “get it in writing”
#10 You don’t have any expertise in technology

[inVerita is a software consulting company focusing on outsourcing and staff augmentation services based in Ukraine. https://inveritasoft.com]