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प्रश्न
Do you think outsourcing is good for India? Why are developed countries opposing it?
उत्तर
Yes, outsourcing is good for India. The following points suggest that outsourcing is good for India.
1. Employment: For a developing country like India, employment generation is an important objective and outsourcing proves to be a boon for creating more employment opportunities. It leads to generation of newer and higher paying jobs.
2. Exchange of technical know-how: Outsourcing enables the exchange of ideas and technical know-how of sophisticated and advanced technology from developed to developing countries.
3. International worthiness: Outsourcing to India also enhances India’s international worthiness credibility. This increases the inflow of investment to India.
4. Encourages other sectors: Outsourcing not only benefits the service sector but also affects other related sectors like industrial and agricultural sector through various backward and forward linkages.
5. Contributes to human capital formation: Outsourcing helps in the development and formation of human capital by training, imparting them with advanced skills, thereby, increasing their future scope and their suitability for high ranked jobs.
6. Better standard of living and eradication of poverty: By creating more and higher paying jobs, outsourcing improves the standard and quality of living of the people in the developing countries. It also helps in reducing poverty.
7. Greater infrastructural investment: Outsourcing to India requires better quality infrastructure. This leads to the modernisation of the economy and larger investment by the government to develop quality infrastructure and develop quality human capital.
However, Outsourcing to India is good but developed countries oppose this because outsourcing leads to the outflow of investments and funds from the developed countries to the less developed countries. Also the MNCs contribute more to the development of the host country than the home country. Further, outsourcing reduces the employment generation in the developed countries as the same jobs can be done in the less developed countries at relatively cheap wages. Moreover, this leads to job insecurity in the developed countries as at a point of time jobs can be outsourced to the developing countries.
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संबंधित प्रश्न
Assess any three basis on which globalisation is being resisted in India.
"Globalisation has shifted power from nation-states to global consumers." Justify the statement.
Which of the statements are TRUE about globalisation?
- Globalisation is only about movement of commodities.
- Globalisation does not involve a conflict of values.
- Services are an insignificant part of globalisation.
- Globalisation is about worldwide interconnectedness.
India has certain advantages which make it a favourite outsourcing destination. What are these advantages?
When was WTO established?
Read the following statements carefully and choose the correct alternatives given below:
Statement 1 - India is often called the ‘outsourcing hub’ of the world.
Statement 2 - Availability of skilled manpower is one of the prime factors responsible for the status gained by India at the international platform.
Organisation which does not facilitable the process of globalization ______.
In 1986-87, the overall fiscal deficit of India touched an all time high of ______.
Give an account of the changing role of state in the light of Globalization.
Why developed countries oppose outsourcing?
Global Burdeno (Disease(GBD) is ______
Which of the following are the political manifestations of the globalisation?
______ is all about who gets what, when, where and how.
What is/are component/s of worldwide interconnectedness?
Consider the following statement(s) that have contributed to the process of globalisation. Choose the correct statement (s)
Read the passage given below carefully and answer the questions that follow:
Globalisation as a concept fundamentally deals with flows. These flows could be of various kinds - ideas moving from one part of the world to another, capital shunted between two or more places, commodities being traded across borders and people moving in search of better livelihoods to different parts of the world. The crucial element is the ‘worldwide interconnectedness’ that is created and sustained as a consequence of these constant flows. |
- ‘Worldwide interconnectedness’ is also known as ______.
- Globalisation
- Liberalisation
- Socialisation
- Privatisation
- Dimensions of globalisation are ______.
- political, social and spiritual
- social, economic and geographical
- political, economic and environmental
- political, social and economic
- Which among the following increases economic activities?
- Decline in employment
- Increase m the index of poverty
- Strong global economic growth
- Great decline in the trade
- Which one of the following is an impact of globalisation?
- The power of the states has increased.
- New trade barriers have been imposed.
- Choice of the customer has increased.
- It has given a boost to local industries.