Once again, India did not "take away" jobs. During the economic downturn after 2008, it wasn't just home values that tanked the economy. The film industry suffered a rapid contraction of profits due to the evaporation of DVD sales. It was during this time in 2009 through 2011 that DWA could have taken steps to reduce production costs through layoffs. What actually happened is that the management decided to increase production in effort to increase the profitability of the company by creating more properties and hoping many would become ongoing franchises, especially in light of Shrek being retired. This required lower costs to move forward and India was able to give DWA that added push to make it happen. Without this - without the India initiative, DWA would not have been able to increase its output to 3 movies. This was a sound plan that protected the US staff as well as giving greater opportunity to everyone involved. The problem here was not that India failed or the India initiative took away jobs. The problem is that a very expensive movie to make that performs below expectations will cause a very direct effect on financing the next batch of properties. The income from this year's movie decides how easy it is to fund the one for two years from now.
Sure there may be some people in your department you don't like or mid-level management people you don't respect and even high-level managers whom you blame for steering the company wrong. You may even be blaming a crew on the other side of the world for losing your job or that of a coworker - but the truth is that it comes down to what the movie's ability to generate dollars above and beyond the money spent investing in its performance. If a mostly US-crew-made movie fails to capture #1 at the box office, then it makes no sense whatsoever to blame India for those financial repercussions.
Naming such and such artist, supervisor, manager, executive, or an entire country is not the answer. Look at what you put out there - it's about the movie and whether people say "Shut up and take my money!" as they beat a path down the box office.