释义 |
Definition of offshoring in English: offshoringnoun ɒfˈʃɔːrɪŋɑfˈʃɔrɪŋ mass nounThe practice of basing some of a company's processes or services overseas, so as to take advantage of lower costs. Example sentencesExamples - Still, offshoring can test the management skills of some startups.
- They have reacted with a mixture of dismay and anger to the spate of legislative activity aimed at banning overseas outsourcing or offshoring of government contracts.
- The TAA program should be expanded to cover individuals dislocated by offshoring in service industries or in public employment.
- He expects this outsourcing and offshoring to increase and insists both practices will benefit the US economy in the long run.
- For tech workers, at least, the threat of offshoring is also a strong motivator.
- Here's where the accelerated practice of offshoring creates a new and prodigious challenge.
- It is time to expand this program to workers who lose service jobs to offshoring.
- The end result of corporate adjustments to offshoring is a boost in Ryla's revenues, which are expected to hit $7 million in fiscal 2004.
- The airline has figured out how to cut costs and still avoid offshoring.
- The first great offshoring of service jobs occurred when back-office work and call centers went to Northern Ireland over a decade ago.
- But this country's response to offshoring cannot be protectionism - although protecting a few jobs in certain places will be necessary.
- Talk of offshoring can get them hot under the collar.
- To date, 35 state legislatures have drafted bills addressing offshoring and 161 state laws restricting or banning offshoring have been proposed.
- But does this policy solution also make sense vis-à-vis the challenges posed by offshoring of service employment?
- Those losses are caused as much, or more, by productivity gains from automation than from so-called offshoring.
- Indeed, offshoring - sending work overseas - isn't always all it's made out to be.
- For many multinationals, in fact, offshoring can be a public-relations nightmare at both ends of the pipeline.
- In this regard, offshoring is likely to show up more in the compensation trends of our domestic workers in affected sectors than in their employment trends.
- Despite the discouraging outlook, many black-owned businesses are proving that offshoring does not spell the end of contracting as we know it.
- Further benefits are derived from offshoring through the ability of US corporations to deliver their services back to the USA more cheaply.
Origin 1980s: from offshore + -ing1. Definition of offshoring in US English: offshoringnounɑfˈʃɔrɪŋäfˈSHôriNG The practice of basing some of a company's processes or services overseas, so as to take advantage of lower costs. Example sentencesExamples - They have reacted with a mixture of dismay and anger to the spate of legislative activity aimed at banning overseas outsourcing or offshoring of government contracts.
- Talk of offshoring can get them hot under the collar.
- Further benefits are derived from offshoring through the ability of US corporations to deliver their services back to the USA more cheaply.
- It is time to expand this program to workers who lose service jobs to offshoring.
- Indeed, offshoring - sending work overseas - isn't always all it's made out to be.
- The end result of corporate adjustments to offshoring is a boost in Ryla's revenues, which are expected to hit $7 million in fiscal 2004.
- But does this policy solution also make sense vis-à-vis the challenges posed by offshoring of service employment?
- The first great offshoring of service jobs occurred when back-office work and call centers went to Northern Ireland over a decade ago.
- To date, 35 state legislatures have drafted bills addressing offshoring and 161 state laws restricting or banning offshoring have been proposed.
- Here's where the accelerated practice of offshoring creates a new and prodigious challenge.
- For many multinationals, in fact, offshoring can be a public-relations nightmare at both ends of the pipeline.
- He expects this outsourcing and offshoring to increase and insists both practices will benefit the US economy in the long run.
- But this country's response to offshoring cannot be protectionism - although protecting a few jobs in certain places will be necessary.
- Still, offshoring can test the management skills of some startups.
- The TAA program should be expanded to cover individuals dislocated by offshoring in service industries or in public employment.
- The airline has figured out how to cut costs and still avoid offshoring.
- For tech workers, at least, the threat of offshoring is also a strong motivator.
- Those losses are caused as much, or more, by productivity gains from automation than from so-called offshoring.
- Despite the discouraging outlook, many black-owned businesses are proving that offshoring does not spell the end of contracting as we know it.
- In this regard, offshoring is likely to show up more in the compensation trends of our domestic workers in affected sectors than in their employment trends.
Origin 1980s: from offshore + -ing. |