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As Bank Jobs Go Abroad, Are Records
at Risk?
Patrick Jonnson
January 6, 2006
The Christian Science Monitor
Following are excerpts from an article
that appeared in the January 6, edition
of The Christian
Science Monitor.
ATLANTA – First, US textile jobs
were shipped to the Orient, then customer
service call centers for American companies
cropped up in Manila. Now the back office
of the corner bank is being hauled to
Bombay and Bangladore, India.
From SunTrust in Atlanta to Bank of
America in Charlotte, N.C., banks are
hiring overseas shops to stay competitive,
be more efficient, and have access to
cheap labor.
But as more accounting and investment
banking is being sent overseas, the result
is that Americans' personal bank accounts
are increasingly susceptible to theft
and fraud, some experts say.
Other top banks such as JPMorgan Chase
and Wachovia are also at the forefront
of offshoring.
Last month, JPMorgan Chase announced
it expects to double the number of Indian
employees to 9,000 people by next year.
Currently, about 10 percent of employees
of US banks work outside the country.
This number is expected to rise to 20
percent - or 2 million people - by 2010,
according to a recent Deloitte & Touche
study.
"The new frontier is back-office
processing done offshore," says
Bob Olson, CEO of Dallas-based Carretek,
a contractor that runs back-office shops
for banks in India.
Banks also now have the technological
means and regulatory go-ahead from the
federal government to do offshoring,
says Mr. Olson, because of the Banking
Modernization Act in 1999.
US banks attributed $19 billion in losses
from fraud in 2004, according to TowerGroup,
a financial services research firm in
Needham, Mass. Some expect more red ink
with offshoring.
"Security can of course be an issue
even in the US, but it is potentially
an even bigger concern for offshored
work," says Norm Matloff, a computer-science
professor at the University of California
at Davis, in an e-mail. "Typically,
developing countries do not have the
sophisticated security protections which
we have here."
To be sure, Wachovia and Bank of America
say foreign workers will get only partial
access to accounts - never the whole
file.
Banking experts also say that risk management
is what banks do better than any other
industry, and there's been little consumer
backlash to offshoring. By hiring firms
that monitor workers' activity, bankers
say their overseas operations can withstand
audits from the Federal Reserve. And
if there are problems, banks can cover
the losses, says Paul Stock of the North
Carolina Bankers Association in Raleigh.
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