Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Present participle of
offshore . - noun The
location of a business in another country for tax purposes
Etymologies
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Examples
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“The next wave in offshoring is the Indians really moving beyond information technology into these business functions.”
Offshore Outsourcing’s Next Wave: How High? - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com 2008
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“The next wave in offshoring is the Indians really moving beyond information technology into these business functions.”
Offshore Outsourcing’s Next Wave: How High? - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com 2008
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Their IT services have grown for years and their offshoring is a long-established and very successful operation.
The Outsourcing Rush Is Over Ed Sperling 2010
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And, in Bermuda, everybody's inducted into what we call the offshoring hall of shame.
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If Blinder thinks offshoring is harmful, then he should provide empirical evivdence to back it up.
Economic Advisers Stoop to the Net, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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Hollywood persists in offshoring its audience, with the direst consequences for which movies get made and how.
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Hollywood persists in offshoring its audience, with the direst consequences for which movies get made and how.
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Some employers say they're hiring workers in other countries - a trend known as "offshoring" - because they can pay lower wages, providing a much-needed competitive advantage.
Archive 2004-04-01 2004
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Cutting costs via outsourcing and "offshoring" -- moving operations outside the U.S. but still keeping them under Big Pharmas 'auspices -- isn't a new strategy, but it is an increasingly popular one, Finegold says.
unknown title 2009
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I’m amused by the people who think eLance-type offshoring is a good idea.
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