Richard DeMillo, dean of the College of Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, said universities cannot wait for the government to measure the scope of the change. Georgia Tech already is adjusting its teaching approach based upon the assumption that routine computing jobs will be done overseas in coming years. Employers can save so much money by offshoring ordinary programming tasks that "the economics are overwhelming," DeMillo said. The trend is now so obvious that "we don't need the government to supply the statistics." 'Offshoring' of jobs rises, but how high? |