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Duke Study Looks At Offshoring Jobs

A new report from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business shows a shortage of skilled workers in the U-S may be one of the main reasons for the off-shoring of American business service jobs.  Arie Lewin is a Duke professor of strategy and international business.  He says American companies in I-T services and software development are not saving money by off-shoring

"They basically went through a discovery process to discover all the hidden costs they didn’t know about when they went there. And secondly, wage inflation in those hot spots, and the fact that you have to deal with high turnover and you’re competing with other companies that are competing for the same talent."

Lewin says more than half of those surveyed say off-shoring has not led them to cut their domestic work-force.  Duke’s database at the Center for International Business, Education and Research tracked more than 43-hundred different off-shoring projects.

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Leoneda Inge is the co-host of WUNC's "Due South." Leoneda has been a radio journalist for more than 30 years, spending most of her career at WUNC as the Race and Southern Culture reporter. Leoneda’s work includes stories of race, slavery, memory and monuments. She has won "Gracie" awards, an Alfred I. duPont Award and several awards from the Radio, Television, Digital News Association (RTDNA). In 2017, Leoneda was named "Journalist of Distinction" by the National Association of Black Journalists.
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