<p>Eagle, why don’t you use quote tag. You manually inserted the > anyway… it’s
[quote]
[//quote] just omits one / from the quote. This will make the reading easier and prettier… on the other thread you quoted heavily and it was difficult to read!</p>
<p>IndianPwndDude, yes.
Offshoring is relocating a department or a division (or sometime the entire company, depending on the scale of the corporation) at a foreign land. </p>
<p>Is offshoring synonyms of outsourcing? Both “offshore” positions to foreigners. </p>
<p>But one major difference, which is applicable to most situations, is whether the give away is passed to a foreign company, or is it only the relocation of the work? </p>
<p>Beside cheap labors, sometime the geography and the natural resources are major reasons why offshoring is on the rise.</p>
<p>
I think most of the time when a company offshore a division or a department, while certain employees are going to transferred, the company is more willing to hire and train foreign employees instead. The reason is because domestic employees will demand to receive the same benefits and salary they receive in US. If a company decides to offshore, only managers and senior employees are going there under the same benefits.</p>