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Delivering Justice - With an Aging Workforce The European Directive and Global Data Transfers The Impact of the Recent L-1 Visa Law Changes on Outsourcing |
International Outsourcing: The Legal View of What´s Different By Bill Bierce
For simplicity of discussion (as an American lawyer), the "home" country is the United States, and any other country is considered "offshore." Legal Risk Follows Business OperationsLegal risk management starts with identifying the business process. A company must first examine their internal processes such as enterprise resources planning. Then a business must consider their entire supply chain, ranging from the suppliers and the supplier's suppliers to a company's customers. And also the reporting functions necessary to deliver the company's core goods and/or services to their customers." What is International Outsourcing?"International outsourcing" can take many forms.
TeamworkA company's initial step should involve the selection and reliance upon local foreign lawyers familiar with the outsourcing process. Your domestic outsourcing lawyer should manage the process globally in coordination with your local foreign lawyer. Hidden International Issues Revealed in Due DiligenceA customer considering outsourcing needs to listen carefully and inquire fully to the hidden international issues that should be revealed in the process of investigating the service provider and the proposed form of operations.
What Typical Foreign Legal Issues Arise?Foreign legal advice is needed to address a broad range of the legal issues involved in international outsourcing.
What Typical U.S. Legal Issues Arise?The U.S. lawyer should understand the unique U.S. perspective on international business transactions.
Examples of Issues That Can AriseHidden Political Risk A recent 1998 outsourcing transaction highlights the need to ferret out potential political risk. In that case, a leading U.S. enterprise in mineral extraction wanted customized applications to be developed and maintained by the outsourcer. These applications were indispensable to the smooth operation of the customer's human resources function. The outsourcer explained that its subcontractor in North Carolina had an offshore subsidiary in India that would perform the applications development and maintenance. Suddenly, Pakistan exploded a nuclear device; India and Pakistan exchanged provocative messages; and the United States considered imposing political sanctions on Pakistan and India to quell the unrest and to restrict nuclear proliferation. To overcome the risk that the U.S. government might prohibit the importation into the United States of the Indian-developed software, the North Carolina subcontractor offered to bring the Indian personnel to the United States to perform the development work. While this solution would have avoided such a prohibition, it would have introduced additional uncertainty as to pricing contingencies and potential delays in obtaining work permits (visas) for Indian programmers. Such risks and uncertainties are inherent in international outsourcing. Data Privacy RegulationsIn designing workable international outsourcing, the customer must understand the foreign legal risks that its data might not be transferable freely among the foreign outsourcer and the U.S. customer and the customer's foreign facilities. The European Union's Data Privacy Directive limits the export of European data to countries that do not offer equivalent privacy protections. While the United States does not meet these standards currently, as of this writing (April 5, 1999) the European Commission is presently forbearing from enforcement pending progress on legislation and regulation in the United States Acquired Rights of Workers The European Union Acquired Rights Directive protects employees from the loss of "acquired rights" to pensions, seniority and similar privileges when their unit is transferred to another employer. In other countries (especially in Latin America) workers are entitled to substantial compensation upon their severance from employment, even if they are hired immediately by an outsourcer. In each case, the calculation of projected costs and benefits, as well as the structuring of the transaction, may depend on the applicable labor laws as well as the decisions of individual employees. In the United States and Canada, corporate customers adopt a number of human resources strategies for ensuring the continuation of employment for key employees in any outsourcing or shared sourcing process. In Europe and Latin America, statutory and judicial protections ensure the continuation of employment by virtually all employees, or the inclusion of termination costs in pricing. As a result, in Europe and Latin America, outsourcing may be focused more on strategic benefits than on cost savings. Also, in such countries, facilities management may be more popular than pure outsourcing. The Right LawyersIn conclusion, the management of legal risks in international outsourcing requires skills in "comparative jurisprudence." A company's outsourcing lawyer should not know just the basic process for domestic outsourcing. Even if you rely on a foreign lawyer, your domestic outsourcing lawyer should also have training and skills in foreign law, and in interacting with foreign lawyers, in order to anticipate legal complications and facilitate effective cross-border planning. Bill Bierce is a business, "infrastructure services" and technology attorney with Bierce & Kenerson, P.C. in New York. He earned law diplomas from both U.S. and French law schools, practiced law in Paris, has taught legal and tax aspects of international business for MBA students and has published over 50 legal articles, in six languages. Publish Date: May 1999
For more information... Copyright © 1999 - Everest Partners, L.P.
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