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Where the engineers are

Publication ,  Journal Article
Wadhwa, V; Gereffi, G; Rissing, B; Ong, R
Published in: Issues in Science and Technology
January 1, 2007

The United States political leaders prescribe remedies such as increasing US engineering graduation rates to match the self-proclaimed rates of emerging competition from India and China. The United States graduates roughly 70,000 undergraduate engineers annually, whereas China graduates 600,000 and India 350,000. The Democrats in the House of Representatives in November 2005 proposed an Innovation Agenda that called for graduating 100,000 more engineers and scientists annually. The US companies are engaged in outsourcing because of the deficiency in US workers and a superior education or skills of workers in China and India. it has been observed that 44% of the US company's engineering jobs are more technical in nature than those sent abroad. The most important disadvantage of hiring US engineers were salary demands, limited supply of available people, and lack of industry experience.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Issues in Science and Technology

ISSN

0748-5492

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

Volume

23

Issue

3

Start / End Page

73 / 84

Related Subject Headings

  • General Science & Technology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Wadhwa, V., Gereffi, G., Rissing, B., & Ong, R. (2007). Where the engineers are. Issues in Science and Technology, 23(3), 73–84.
Wadhwa, V., G. Gereffi, B. Rissing, and R. Ong. “Where the engineers are.” Issues in Science and Technology 23, no. 3 (January 1, 2007): 73–84.
Wadhwa V, Gereffi G, Rissing B, Ong R. Where the engineers are. Issues in Science and Technology. 2007 Jan 1;23(3):73–84.
Wadhwa, V., et al. “Where the engineers are.” Issues in Science and Technology, vol. 23, no. 3, Jan. 2007, pp. 73–84.
Wadhwa V, Gereffi G, Rissing B, Ong R. Where the engineers are. Issues in Science and Technology. 2007 Jan 1;23(3):73–84.

Published In

Issues in Science and Technology

ISSN

0748-5492

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

Volume

23

Issue

3

Start / End Page

73 / 84

Related Subject Headings

  • General Science & Technology