Comment by dmix

Comment by dmix 4 days ago

80 replies

Amazon also employs 1.5 million people globally, 350k of which are in corporate. These 16k were corporate. Still sucks for everyone involved, I know a corporate sales guy who got laid off Microsoft and it disrupted his life pretty seriously. As Stalin says one's a tragedy, a millions a statistic.

darth_avocado 4 days ago

Since the HN reaction to layoffs almost always is about blaming H1B, here’s a few more things the headline misses:

1. Cuts were global 2. Cuts in US also include H1B employees 3. 16000 roles are corporate roles, not just tech related, H1B program is not generally utilized for those roles 4. Expansion in India is not just tech. Amazon is a big retailer in India. Understandably if you’re seeing revenue growth in India, you will grow corporate presence in India. If Walmart becomes a massive retailer in EU, it will hire EU nationals in EU. That’s not shipping jobs to EU.

  • echelon 4 days ago

    Shouldn't we all want H1B rather than offshoring?

    That keeps the facilities here, the local employment options here, the growth here, the tax base here...

    We should want more smart people moving to this country. More business creation, more capital, more labor, more output.

    Immigration is total economic growth for America, non zero-sum. Offshoring is not only economic loss, but second order loss: we lose the capacity over an extended time frame.

    • johnnyanmac 4 days ago

      I want the loopholes on H1Bs to be closed. H1B is a great concept to get foreign talent that found domestically. But these days is a shell game that's turned into a way to put shackles on employees who can't job hop. It hurts both groups in the long run.

      • FilosofumRex 4 days ago

        > want the loopholes on H1Bs to be closed. H1B is a great concept...

        There are no loopholes on H1B, it's working exactly as it was intended - replace, not just supplement - American workers with cheaper, more obedient tech slave workers dependent of their master-employer for their survival.

        The talent visa is called O-1 not H1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=envbbUc4LhU

      • dlahoda 4 days ago

        would job hop allowance help?

    • Gibbon1 4 days ago

      > Shouldn't we all want H1B rather than offshoring?

      That's my opinion.

      However there are issues with who's sucking the tit. If you bring in a bunch of people from outside instead of hiring locals that's not a win for the locals. On the other hand whats the difference for someone in San Francisco if Apple hires a guy from India vs New Jersey? Not much.

      And H1B visa's can be low grade indentured servitude.

      • learingsci 4 days ago

        Guy in San Francisco can move to NJ easier than Mumbai.

    • autokad 4 days ago

      I am not so sure on that. They raise inflation, home prices, etc. The locals see no real benefit except having to pay more for everything. While more taxes are collected, most of that goes to offsetting just some of the economic pain induced by the people living there.

      and it is in fact zero sum. every spot filled in university or company is a spot not taken by a local, as its obvious by the numbers, more local people are not getting admitted into CS programs nor are they being hired. its 100% zero sum when we are looking at these numbers and %s.

      • echelon 4 days ago

        Companies want to cut costs. They will.

        If you don't bring more fungible labor into the US, the jobs will be offshored.

        Look at what just happened to film labor in 2022-2023. The industry was burgeoning off the heels of the streaming wars and ZIRP. Then the stikes happened.

        Amazon and Netflix took trained crews in the Eastern Europe bloc and leveraged tax deals and existing infra in Ireland and the UK. Film production in LA and Atlanta are now down over 75%. Even with insane local tax subsidies - unlimited subsidies in the case or Georgia.

        Software development will escape to other cheaper countries. They're talented and hard working. AI will accelerate this.

        Then what? America lost manufacturing. I think we've decided that was a very bad idea.

        We need to move the cheaper labor here. More workforce means more economic opportunities for startups and innovation. Labor will find a way as long as the infrastructure is here.

        De-growth is cost cutting and collapse. Immigration is rapid growth, diversification, innovation, and market dominance.

        All those people start buying from businesses here. They start paying taxes here. It supercharges the local economy. Your house might go up in price, but way more money is moving around - more jobs, more growth, second order effects.

        America doesn't have the land limits Canada has. And we can set tax policy and regulations to encourage building.

        I'd rather be in an America forecasted to hit 500 million citizens - birth or immigration. And I want to spend on their education. I want capital to fund their startup ideas. I want the FTC/DOJ to break up market monopolies to create opportunity for new risk takers and labor capital.

        That was the world the Boomers had. Exciting, full of opportunity. That was the world of a rapidly industrializing America.

        Right now, the world we have ahead looks bleak. People aren't having kids and we aren't bringing in immigrants. We'll have less consumerism, less labor, and everything will shrink and shrivel and be less than it was.

      • Analemma_ 4 days ago

        You could use this exact argument to say nobody should ever have children-- children also raise inflation, home prices, etc. And the majority of your property taxes go specifically towards programs which would be unneeded if nobody had any children.

        The fact that naive anti-immigration arguments can be copy-pasted unchanged into arguments against having children is a sign that maybe those arguments are stupid. To understand why, you might start with the fact that immigrants also purchase goods and services, and hence pay the salaries of the ~70% of people in this country employed in some way or another by consumer spending.

    • learingsci 4 days ago

      GDP matters very little when I’m homeless.

      • aprilthird2021 4 days ago

        If you're homeless due to losing your job, then you'll be homeless whether your job goes overseas or to someone else in the US.

        At least in the latter scenario the job is still here for you to get back one day

    • jimbob45 4 days ago

      Yep. The negativity around H-1Bs is centered around using them for low/mid-level roles in the pursuit of wage suppression, racial/caste discrimination with hiring managers abusing the system to get their friends in, and the tech industry unnecessarily hogging them when we really need them in niche industries (e.g. nuclear engineering).

      Trump made the cost change some months ago to address those concerns but I haven’t seen any studies showing whether or not those changes had a positive effect or not.

    • incr_me 4 days ago

      Wait why doesn't India get to have these things, too?

      • int_19h 4 days ago

        There's no reason why it shouldn't, but why should American corporations subsidize it?

    • KerrAvon 4 days ago

      We should want open borders. Immigration is a significant net positive. But we can settle for controlled immigration with liberal limits.

      H1-B is stupid on its face. You're seriously telling me that this software engineering job absolutely cannot be filled by an American? That doesn't pass the laugh test.

      • jandrese 4 days ago

        > H1-B is stupid on its face. You're seriously telling me that this software engineering job absolutely cannot be filled by an American? That doesn't pass the laugh test.

        The job description is a senior full stack product developer fluent in all programming languages and frameworks. Salary is $70,000/year. Somehow they can never find Americans to fill those jobs. They'll go on Linkedin complaining that Americans are too lazy and don't have the right hustle culture and talk about made up concepts like work life balance when the bosses demand 100 hour work weeks without overtime pay.

      • pc86 4 days ago

        You say "we should want open borders" then argue for something that is objectively not open borders. "Open borders" and "controlled immigration" are diametrically opposed things, regardless of whatever liberal limits you're imagining. Almost nobody is arguing for zero immigration.