@OP+1drUEjNo
Get your facts straight before you post. When the focus is on transferring work from the destination where the VAST MAJORITY of the customers are, to destinations that offer the very cheapest labor sources, all to make short term profits, is just one example of the collective short-term executive bonus-centric attitude of the top layers making the critical decisions. This has been going on for years now. The current problems are a result of year over year short-term strategies to drive up short-term profits, rather than consider longer-term horizons. The current mgmt is doing nothing different except accelerating it.
The low-cost labor staff understands that what's going on. They aren't stupid. They know they receive a fraction of the salaries they're replacing. All they have to do is a good enough job until they find the next one that pays better and then they're gone too. Why not? If the job can be moved to an even cheaper destination, their jobs are gone too.
I don't care where you are located. When a company sells a product that requires people to actually think when making the product, and the company treats those people like they are unimportant interchangeable components, then don't be surprised when people do the very least amount of acceptable work to finish a task and then jump to the next best offer.