The work that left
Phil Hatch
Forthcoming · Spring 2027

The work that left

Thirty years of outsourcing, and the honest accounting nobody published.

An industry sold a promise it could not price. This is the reckoning: what was moved, what it actually cost, who captured the gains, and what the receiving economies were left holding.

Written from primary data and three decades inside the rooms where these decisions were made. Forty-four chapters. No vendor testimonials, no anonymous anecdotes, no claim that cannot be sourced.

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44 chapters61 exhibits1,140 sources citedZero vendor testimonialsSpring 2027 44 chapters61 exhibits1,140 sources citedZero vendor testimonialsSpring 2027

Four parts

Forty-four chapters
Part One · Ch 1–11

The Promise

How labor arbitrage was sold, to whom, and on what arithmetic. The models that convinced boards, and the assumptions those models buried in their footnotes.

Part Two · Ch 12–24

The Machine

Transition, attrition, governance theatre, and the slow migration of judgment work that nobody put in the business case.

Part Three · Ch 25–35

The Bill

What it actually cost, measured rather than asserted. Including the costs never booked because no line existed to book them against.

Part Four · Ch 36–44

What Comes Next

Demographics, agentic systems, and the end of the cheaper-somewhere assumption. What boards and ministries should do differently.

Advance praise

Early readers
The first account of this industry written by someone with nothing left to sell.Placeholder attribution
Uncomfortable reading for anyone who signed one of these deals. Which is most of us.Placeholder attribution
Hatch does the thing the consultancies never did. He shows the working.Placeholder attribution