What about the 25% of roles in the tech sector that are filled by immigrants with language and technical skills the locals don't have? Why bother bringing them here when they can just work remotely?Tax and legal is part of it. Hours of works, especially where the multi-national is supporting European clients is a 2nd one. If you're supporting European office hours from India for example, it's an evening shift which is more difficult to resource. Also turnover in the offshore countries is usualy way higher then domestic staff, hence consistency of delivery becomes an issue.
My experience is that it is the lower end "non-thinking" roles that tend to get offshored
What about the 25% of roles in the tech sector that are filled by immigrants with language and technical skills the locals don't have? Why bother bringing them here when they can just work remotely?
What about the 25% of roles in the tech sector that are filled by immigrants with language and technical skills the locals don't have? Why bother bringing them here when they can just work remotely?
What about the 25% of roles in the tech sector that are filled by immigrants with language and technical skills the locals don't have? Why bother bringing them here when they can just work remotely?
Yes, that's the big attraction but the OECD tax reform proposals may change that.Because they are more productive here for a start.
They generate more profit in proximity to the IP and other skilled workers.
It helps MNCs pay corporate tax at Irish rates rather than (say) Polish rates.
That is something a lot of companies will reconsider but for those in project/creative work spaces (and I'm speaking as someone who falls partially into that category), remote working is simply not as productive, far too much time spent on conference calls and less time spent brainstorming. Majority of overseas workers in Ireland at the high end are also European grads because there are no visa issues. From a cost saving perspective, their salaries would not be much lower in a lot of other European countries.
I think companies will start offering a reduced salary to go full remote in Ireland, so there will be an impact on tax revenues there. My logic for this is we have already seen the large MNCs do this in United States.
Sure that has already happened, there hasn't been too much media focus on it but Google's most international work force went "home" to brazil and Europe mainly. It only made the news when Google told them they had to be back in Dublin by December for tax and other reasons to be considered "irish" workers. I think anyone from India, China would probably have stayed put as the big reason for getting a job with Google in Dublin is to live in Europe and a job with Google is the passport for that.Now that so many (all?) of the companies in the Silicone Docks, IFSC and similar around the country is working from home why can't home be India or China or Poland or wherever?
Monitoring outcomes and performance is also far more difficult as well as team management and communication to staff.
Have Amazon ordered Irish staff back to the office, or is this just a US thing?Looks like the tide is fast going out for the whole working from home culture especially among the multinationals. During covid lots of people were saying that this was the new normal and people would never return to the office but the Amazon directive has shown that working from home was really just a covid government mandated directive and not an organic "new normal". Lots of people loudly proclaimed that people would never return to pubs or live music again and that was also the new normal
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