Offshore outsourcing Subcontracting in the same country would be outsourcing, but not offshoring. A company moving an internal business unit from one country to another would be offshoring or
physical restructuring, but not outsourcing. A company subcontracting a business unit to a different company in another country would be both outsourcing and offshoring,
offshore outsourcing.
Offshoring as a service (
OaaS) is a
business model in which the offshore office is outsourcing to a vendor. The OaaS model leans towards utilizing a team or company which specializes in offshoring work and uses them on a
contractual basis as a part of their own team. Types of offshore outsourcing include: •
Information technology outsourcing (ITO) is where outsourcing is related to technology or the internet, such as computer programming. •
Business process outsourcing (BPO) involves contracting out operational functions to a third-party service provider. •
Offshore Software development •
Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) is a type of outsourcing that involves or requires more advanced technical skills and a higher level of expertise. • Customer Support Outsourcing (CSO) involves delegating customer service functions to offshore call centres or service providers to handle inquiries, complaints, and assistance. • Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO) is a workforce solution in which a business transfers all or part of its recruitment to an external provider. Businesses can deliver a standalone service or the entire operations. Empirical evidence shows that multi-country ("portfolio") configurations have become more common in manufacturing relocations since 2018; only about one-third of observed moves involved a single destination, with many firms splitting volumes across two to six countries to hedge risk. According to the 1913
New York Times article "Near Source of Supplies the Best Policy", the main focus was then on "cost of production." Although transportation cost was addressed, they did not choose among: • transporting supplies to place of production • transporting finished goods to place(s) of sale • cost and availability of labor The term
nearshoring derives from
offshoring. When combined with outsourcing,
nearshore outsourcing, the nearshore workers are not employees of the company for which the work is performed. Nearshoring can involve business strategy to locate operations close to where product is sold. This is contrasted with using low-wage manufacturing operations in developing nations and shipping product back to the country that offshored the work. With nearshore outsourcing, the work is done by an outside company rather than internally, but in contrast to typical offshore outsourcing, the work is done in fairly close proximity to the company headquarters and its target market. Nearshoring is often used for
information technology (IT) processes such as application development, maintenance and testing. In Europe, nearshore outsourcing relationships are between clients in larger European economies and various providers in smaller European nations. The attraction is lower-cost skilled labor forces, and a less stringent regulatory environment, but crucially they allow for more day to day physical oversight. These countries also have strong cultural ties to the major economic centers in Europe as they are part of EU. For example, as of 2020 Portugal is considered to be the most trending outsourcing destination as big companies like Mercedes, Google,
Communication Constraints imposed by time zones can complicate communication; near-sourcing or nearshoring offers a solution. English language skills are the cornerstone of Nearshore and IT services. Collaboration by universities, industry, and government has slowly produced improvements. Proximity also facilitates in-person interaction regularly and/or when required. The complexities of offshoring stem from language and cultural differences, travel distances, workday/time zone mismatches, and greater effort for needed for establishing trust and long-term relationships. Many nearshore providers attempted to circumvent communication and project management barriers by developing new ways to align organizations. As a result, concepts such as remote insourcing were created to give clients more control in managing their own projects. Nearshoring still has not overcome all barriers, but proximity allows more flexibility to align organizations.
Production offshoring Production offshoring, also known as
physical restructuring, of established products involves relocation of physical manufacturing processes overseas, usually to a lower-cost destination or one with fewer regulatory restrictions.
Physical restructuring arrived when the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) made it easier for manufacturers to shift production facilities from the US to
Mexico. This trend later shifted to China, which offered cheap prices through very low wage rates, few
workers' rights laws, a
fixed currency pegged to the US dollar, (currently fixed to a basket of economies) cheap loans, cheap land, and factories for new companies, few environmental regulations, and huge
economies of scale based on cities with populations over a million workers dedicated to producing a single kind of product. However, many companies are reluctant to move high value-added production of leading-edge products to China because of lax enforcement of intellectual property laws. Since 2018, labor-intensive sectors such as footwear and textiles were often the earliest to relocate part of their output from China to established hubs (notably Vietnam), while capital-intensive industries like electronics and automotive tended to move more slowly and in stages as local supplier ecosystems were developed. Much of the job movement was to outside companies,
offshore outsourcing.
Re-shoring Reshoring, also known as
onshoring,
backshoring, or
inshoring, is the act of reversing an offshoring change—moving a business process that was offshored back to the original country. John Urry, professor of sociology at
Lancaster University, argues that the concealment of income, the avoidance of taxation and eluding legislation relating to work, finance, pleasure, waste, energy and security may be becoming a serious concern for democratic governments and ordinary citizens who may be adversely affected by unregulated, offshore activities. Further, the rising costs of transportation could lead to production nearer the point of consumption becoming more economically viable, particularly as new technologies such as
additive manufacturing mature. The
World Bank's 2019
World Development Report on the future of work considers the potential for automation to drive companies to reshore production, reducing the role of labor in the process, and offers suggestions as to how governments can respond. A similar movement can be seen related to
Robotic Process Automation, called RPA or RPAAI for self-guided RPA 2.0 based on
artificial intelligence, where the incentive to move repetitive shared services work to lower cost countries is partially taken away by the progression of technology. Melanie Rojas
et al in a 2022
Deloitte's report commend adopting a combination of re-shoring and
friendshoring - "working with other nations and trusted supply sources" - as a business practice and policy initiative aiming to promote
supply chain resilience. Empirical studies of 2018–2023 relocations indicate that reshoring to the home country comprised a small minority of observed moves (about 16% of 244 decisions), revealing a gap between policy rhetoric and actual corporate behavior; diversification across multiple foreign locations was far more prevalent. == Practices ==