Bill

Bill > SCR88


NJ SCR88

NJ SCR88
Urges Congress and President to enact legislation that penalizes companies that outsource labor to foreign markets.


summary

Introduced
02/05/2026
In Committee
02/05/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This resolution urges the Congress and the President of the United States to enact legislation that penalizes companies that outsource labor to foreign markets. Such legislation is critical to combat unemployment and to encourage companies to hire and invest in American workers. Companies based in the United States have increasingly opted to outsource labor to foreign countries as a means to keep costs down and to remain competitive in the domestic and global marketplace. Companies that outsource typically hire workers in emerging markets in regions of the world with lower standards of living than the United States, allowing them to pay wages that are subpar to those paid to American workers. In turn, these companies can sell their products and services at lower prices than those sourced domestically. While the outsourcing of labor may benefit a company's bottom line, it does nothing to help the 7.6 million Americans, over 240,000 of whom live in New Jersey, currently unemployed in the United States. Workers in industries such as manufacturing and computer technology, as well as those across industries employed in call centers, have been significantly impacted by the loss of American jobs due to outsourcing. According to the most recent data produced by the United States Department of Commerce, multinational enterprises based in this country employed 14 million people in their foreign affiliates in 2023, an increase of over 3 million outsourced workers since 2009. Half of these 14 million overseas jobs would nearly equal the total number of workers currently unemployed in this country. In order to reverse this corporate trend of outsourcing labor to increase profit margins, the Congress and President of the United States must push forward policies that motivate companies to hire American workers. Such initiatives should include enacting legislation that prohibits companies that outsource from receiving and benefiting from federal contracts, tax breaks, grants, or loans, as well as legislation that establishes an outsourcing tax on companies that eliminate American jobs in order to hire workers overseas at inferior wages. Through these types of penalties, Congress and the President can establish significant financial incentives for companies based in the United States to keep jobs in this country, thereby providing vital employment opportunities to the millions of Americans searching for work.

AI Summary

This concurrent resolution urges the United States Congress and the President to pass laws that would penalize companies for outsourcing labor, meaning sending jobs to foreign countries, often to reduce costs by hiring workers at lower wages than Americans would receive. The resolution highlights that this practice contributes to unemployment in the U.S., impacting industries like manufacturing, technology, and call centers, and suggests that penalties could include prohibiting companies that outsource from receiving federal contracts, tax breaks, grants, or loans, or imposing a special tax on such companies, thereby creating financial incentives for businesses to keep jobs within the United States and support the American workforce.

Committee Categories

Labor and Employment

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Labor Committee (on 02/05/2026)

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