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by Clubber
791 days ago
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>The pandemic proved that organizations can continue to function even if the workforce is distributed globally, plus visa processing in the US has basically ground to a halt due to systemic issues internally at USCIS. They realized this with the big offshoring boom in the late 1990s. >This is the pandora's box that was opened by WFH and systemic incompetence in USCIS. It is not. Companies have been offshoring as much labor as they feasibly can, and often more, for at least 3 decades. |
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The productivity tooling we take for granted (Github, Zoom, Slack, Salesforce, high speed internet penetration) didn't truly exist in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
> It is not. Companies have been offshoring as much labor as they feasibly can, and often more, for at least 3 decades.
Absolutely, and we've done it as well, but the pandemic was a major forcing function in the tech industry to show that you can still retain your employees whose visas renewals got stuck in the system or rejected, but still want to work for you.
A mix of coincidences (rise of Productivity SaaS, a global pandemic, Twitter mass layoffs yet semi-functional operations, extremely slow visa processing by USCIS) has caused a systemic shift in the tech industry.
A lot of old timers think it'll eventually get better - but it won't for new grads. New grad hiring has functionally stopped, because that capital can (and has) been better deployed abroad now.
This is not to say the industry is dead - if anything it's growing - but the barrier to entry is going to be much higher now. You can't just be a dropout from Spokane and finagle your way into a 6 figure entry level dev role anymore.