Edited on Wed Apr-12-06 09:16 AM by Dr. Jones
I was one of those laid off from a midsize telecom right down the street from Cable & Wireless in Northern Virginia back in 2001. I did not know it was attributable to international businesses shedding jobs.
Sadly, America just isn't America anymore, at least the way it used to be. America doesn't even own itself anymore - foreign countries own it. I think the UAE deal really brought this to the fore. And I think the American people have made it plain and clear - ENOUGH IS ENOUGH.
GIVE US OUR DAMN COUNTRY BACK!!
Foreign Companies Reduce Local Workforces
Cuts Mostly Attributable to Telecom Bust, but Some Officials Fear Political Climate
By Neil Irwin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 12, 2006; Page D04
International businesses shed jobs in the Washington area over the last five years, and officials who market the region abroad worry that political sentiment against foreign investment could further crimp an important piece of the local economy.
According to a study by the Greater Washington Initiative, which coordinates efforts to persuade businesses to locate in the area, $41 billion of economic activity in the region last year was attributable to the Washington operations of international companies, embassies and organizations like the World Bank; tourists from abroad; and other forms of international spending and investment. That amounts to 13 percent of the regional economy, about the same as in 2000.
The sector employed, directly or indirectly, 280,000 people in 2005, according to the study, down 26,000 since 2000. Tim Priest, executive director of the Greater Washington Initiative, attributed the decline to several large foreign-owned telecommunications companies -- among them Cable & Wireless PLC, Nortel Networks Corp., and Alcatel -- making major cuts during the telecom collapse of 2001 and 2002.
Priest and others involved with marketing the region say attracting more companies from abroad will be essential to the area's continued growth because the sector makes the regional economy more diverse and better able to withstand downturns in local industries. Those efforts could be hurt by recent political developments, Priest and others involved with marketing the region said.
Source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/11/AR2006041101618.html?referrer=email