PLEX86  x86- Virtual Machine (VM) Program
 CVS  |  Mailing List  |  Download  |  Successes  |  In the Media  |  Newsgroups

Mexico targets US developer jobs


Your Ad Here

Your Ad Here

Michael Kanellos, 18 May 2006 CNET News.com

Microsoft warns of major UK skills shortage
Colin Barker, 06 July 2006 ZDNet UK The UK is facing a 100,000-plus shortfall in IT skills, says a new report, but...

A Mexican trade group argues the country is ideal for 'nearshore' outsourcing ÷ and it is so close that US workers can often commute

Microsoft warns of major UK skills shortage
TwistyCreek If companies start to pay more, more kids will be interested into getting a career in the field. The job insecurity due to offshoring and declining wages due to the...

While Europe looks to India as its offshoring destination of choice, Mexico has launched an initiative to promote itself to the US as a "nearshoring" destination that's so close to home it's often within commuting distance.

And the benefits of proximity add up, says Eduardo Ruiz Esparza Flores, president of Canieti, a Mexican IT trade group working with the Mexican government to promote the country as an outsourcing destination. He is also chief executive of RFID Native, which builds radio frequency identification systems.

During an interview at the Gartner Symposium ITxpo, Flores noted that there are more than 300 flights per day between the US and Mexico. Bandwidth costs on software projects also add up, so the closer your programmers are to corporate headquarters, the better.

He said: "We are looking for complex and network-needed projects with high response requirements."

The language barrier is easily overcome, according to Flores, and in many areas, US executives can stay in the US and commute down to work.

Three years ago, the Mexican government launched a programme, called Prosoft, to promote the country's tech industry. The goal is to increase the size of the Mexican IT industry to $15bn (£8bn) annually by 2013. Two weeks ago, the government launched an advertising and recruiting campaign for Prosoft.

However, Mexico isn't cheap compared with the larger Asian nations when it comes to outsourcing. Mexico's contract-manufacturing industry was hit hard when China ramped up as a manufacturing powerhouse.

Still, Mexican labour is cheaper than American labour. Newly minted Mexican engineers make around $1,200 per month, Flores said ÷ about a third of what young engineers earn in the US. Intel has about 1,000 employees in Mexico, he added. Freescale also has development operations.

Technology also remains a popular subject with students in the country. Mexico has around 400,000 students studying IT-related subjects in universities and technical schools. Roughly 60,000 of them graduate from these programmes annually. The Monterrey Insbreastute of Technology, which used Mbuttachusetts Insbreastute of Technology as its model, remains the country's premier technical university.



Your Ad Here

List | Previous | Next

Microsoft warns of major UK skills shortage

Alt Computer Consultants from Newsgroups

India creating more jobs for Americans" 1856