Is it correct to assume that India now has the most Honeywell Aerospace engineers ?
6 replies (most recent on top)
Sorry, that's not been my experience. Brno engineers maybe, but not India.
Why the non-sequitur talk about kids getting MBAs? The topic wasn't all American students, it was about American engineers vs. foreign.
Can't really fault leadership here. Better engineers for less money? Of course they will fawn all over them.
And when I say better engineers, I mean it. Believe me, it pains me to say it. It's sad to see the state of US engineering prowess be overshadowed by India and China but it's the reality of it. Kids are being taught to make easy money by MBAs and aren't entertaining STEM programs. And the experienced engineers have become bitter, disgruntled and lazy.
It's what happens when a country fails to innovate in new technology like solar, automation and battery tech. Instead we let politicians focused on party ideology and talking heads on news programs spew their own opinions opposed to facts....
Depends on what you label as engineers. Even an IT guy who answers your call is called an engineer in India therefore, the term engineer can vary considerably.
Honestly, they are well trained to make presentations that confuses audiences, talk to confuse rather than to enlighten but cheap. With management ever so delighted with nonsensical presentations and unable to confront complex matters, its quite easy why we hire so many engineers in India.
HW happy to hire 3 or 4 to replace each US
Probably. They have to make up for talent with volume.
Depends on the SBU and whether you consider compsci degrees Engineering.
In terms of Engineering degrees I think the answer is no.
Changes everyday considering the current us attrition.