In just THIS for instance. If I were to go on a book buying spree in India, I would have to pay an import duty on the books I brought back into the U.S(If I brought in more than about $600 worth). Code imported from Bangalore to American companies has no such import duty. Manufactured goods have import tariffs, though some countries that tariff is waived. Immigration limits the number of foreign nationals who can work in the U.S. But, by virtue of dialing in, the Virtual worker is subject to no quotas, taxes, tariffs, fees, or restrictions. They contribute ZERO to the American Economy. A working American programmer (or even an immigrant or guest worker) must pay taxes, pay living expenses, get healthcare, pay travel expenses, etc etc, HERE. A NON-Working U.S. programmer contribes litte to the U.S economy either. He pays little in taxes on his unemployment benefits. He STILL must pay living expenses and those don't go down appreciably. He must pay for healthcare out of his own pocket, though likely he will just suffer with whatever ails him until it becomes life-threatening. If he must take a lower paying job, he will, eventually. From there his living expenses will have to be reduced, he pays less tax and contributes LESS to the local economy. I took a 50% pay cut in 2001. I'm not buying cars, computer equipment, or televisions, sir. I'm paying for food, housing, healthcare. -----Original Message----- From: Roshan Shah [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2004 1:35 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [HP3000-L] FW: [3kmigration] HP Recruiting for HP3000 Then same would apply to Computer Books that are sold for $50 in US but sold at $5(Equivalent) in India * To join/leave the list, search archives, change list settings, * * etc., please visit http://raven.utc.edu/archives/hp3000-l.html *