Archive for the ‘Indian Attorneys’ Category

Level the Playing Field – Levy a Value Added Tax on Offshored Services

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010 by admin

With the huge layoffs in major employment sectors such as IT, Accounting and Legal (to name just a few), our Federal government has to step in and correct the trade imbalance with lower wage, emerging nations (e.g. India).  As it stands now we are stripping out all of our middle class jobs and packing them off to India.

The best way, I believe, to tackle this problem is to add a value added tax to all services performed by American companies in foreign nations.   Thus all hourly service fees, manufactured goods, and other work product would be subject to a corrective VAT.  This could be pegged to the currency rates of each country’s currency versus the dollar or could be a flat fee applied across the board.

The only way to prevent outsourcing of American work overseas is to level the playing field.  Emerging nations have no incentive to impair their citizens’ ability to find work (unlike our nation) and thus we have to take corrective action in order to save our way of life and standard of living. Otherwise, we will continue to wipe out the American Middle Class and leave only a precarious few at the top, some with decent paying government jobs and the rest scrapping around to make do, paycheck to paycheck.

Instead of levying taxes on domestically produced products, it’s time to tax the offshore and outsourced production and allow American taxpayers to keep working and retain their standard of living.  As it stands now, the lure of lower wages, the absence of OSHA, anti-discrimination, environmental and labor law is too strong.  Each day brings more news of another company outsourcing its labor force to India, China or another low wage, sweatshop nation.  If we do not do something, then all of our efforts at reducing pollution, establishing regulations and laws to protect workers and the environment will be rendered pointless.

This would certainly bring a lot of chatter to international circles, including the WTO.  But in the end, maybe it is time to abandon such organizations if they are one sided arrangements that constitute a gutting our middle class and destroying our way of life.

If, as the outsourcing apologists contend, that outsourcing increases employment here in the United States, please point me to all of the jobs that outsourcing has created.  I will happily post any such information here.  Of course no one will reply,  as many, many more jobs have been lost due to outsourcing than will ever be created stateside.  Workers retrain at great expense only to find their new career to be outsourced as well.

More on the Lawsuit to Keep Foreign Lawyers out of India

Saturday, April 17th, 2010 by admin

According to the AM Law Daily, the recent suit to prevent foreign “fly in” attorneys from practicing in India, was filed by a thirty year old Indian attorney.  From the article,

For one, Balaji, who names 32 law firms as defendants, claims that international firms are not properly abiding by the ban on practicing in India. “Advocates from various law firms are often visiting India and conducting seminars in various parts of our country,” Bajali alleges. “They are entering into India through visitor’s visa but the actual intention of their visit is to indirectly market and earn money out of clients from India by way of seminars.” And, later: “There is absolutely no scope for any foreign lawyer or foreign law firm to practice the profession of law in [India].”

This article suggests that the goal of the law suit is to establish reciprocity between American, British and Indian practicing attorneys.  This may be part of the reason that the ABA is considering liberalizing foreign attorney practice requirements in the United States.  More from the article,

But it seems clear that what Balaji is really worked up about is the lack of reciprocity between the U.S. (and, especially, the U.K.) and India in terms of allowing non-citizen lawyers to practice law in those countries. Balaji says that India shouldn’t loosen its rules and allow foreign lawyers to even give seminars in India until the U.K. and U.S. make it easier for Indian lawyers to practice in those countries.

A landmark ruling last year prohibited foreign attorneys from practicing law in India.