I understand that timezones may mismatch but employees generally accomodate to the timezone everyone wants.
The different countries payroll can be handled by a decent Saas itself.
So, why are companies hellbent on getting US Remote Employees instead of Remote anywhere?
- Working hours. If you are on the West Coast, good luck finding someone in Europe who will be available at 3pm your time.
- Superiority complex. I get the impression a lot of Americans treat everywhere else like it is a third world country. I work for a US company that has a branch in a post-Soviet EU country, and when the C-levels were discussing expanding our team, they were talking as if there would be a queue of people waiting at the door to interview.
Taxes and employment laws are really not an issue, there are plenty of ways around it, especially if you are a small startup. As others have pointed out, the simplest way is to treat someone as a 1099 independent contractor. You pay them gross, and let them deal with all their own tax responsibilities. If you want proper employees there are agencies everywhere who will deal with this for you, and in a lot of cases government agencies will help you and / or give you tax breaks as they want you to invest in their country.
(Source: As a European, I've worked half my career remotely for US companies)
For example, if you hired someone in Israel, you are mandated to pay taxes, contribute to pension plan, etc. There are labor laws details that you need to know how to work through, etc.
As a fine example, let's say that you have hired someone in Israel and they worked for you for 5 years. You covered payment and told them that they'll cover local taxes, etc.
You now want to fire them.
The following sequence of events happen:
* They sue for wrongful termination (there is a particular process to follow) * They sue for missing pension contributions (the law says that if you didn't contribute to the pension, you are both civilly and criminally liable). And it can be that you are found to be effectively the "pension fund". * They sue for severance pay, which is calculated as 1 month of salary X years worked.
That can be a huge surprise for you.
That is leaving aside things like what happens around work accidents. Did you carry local insurance for that? Or are you on the hook for millions because of that?
Those are all things that can be solved, but they are a major headache.
US talent pool is already deep enough.
If they want to use other countries it’s just for lower wages.
Language, culture, verifiability (even on the level of being able to do a standard background check), payroll, legalities. And all the other reasons they aren't always keen to use offshore people, even if it seems "cheaper". And did I mention language, culture?
The different countries payroll can be handled by a decent SaaS itself.
Throwing a different payroll system into the mix for the the sake of 1 or 2 resources can easily end up being more trouble than it's worth.
Big companies can afford the investment into many small locations and they can afford having the regional expertise to avoid running afoul of local and federal governments. In an ideal world, we'd make this easy for ourselves but the world is not ideal.
Have you ever started a business and run it with a team of folk from across the world on a budget (not including just contracting people via UpWork etc)?
Employees can be upset that you hire oversea. They expect that coworkers there are underpaid, and that you hired these people for that reason. So the image of the company gets a hit even among your workers. And if you go oversea for workforce, they could think that their job will be outsourced as well in the future. And you won't get the same engagement.
Differences in culture do exist as well. I have heard wild stories about outsourcing in India.
Jet lag is also a thing.
kidgorgeous's benefits. govt subsidies can be also right. I think the YC themselves funds nothing but local startups (do they ? I haven't tried to fund a startup yet) Anyway, it's difficult to promote a company that doesn't have any local impact.
However, all the tax and labor laws things are overstated. Countries like France, Romania, India, or Morocco have efficient consulting firms. Large and small companies from any industry work with them everyday on every kind of subject (IT, engineering, ...)
Startups actually do exist outside of the US, believe it or not. And you may find that those are a lot less picky than US ones about the location of remote workers.
I know a company which hired the best MIT PhD but they also hired the best IIT PhDs for the work. Both of them do equally good. But the IIT PhDs are more cost effective and hence they expanded the program in India.
Typically when I've seen job postings US only they're looking for some type of coverage during US business hours; on-call, supporting juniors, meetings with c-suite, etc.
I can deal with 3 in the AM meetings or whatever if the pay is good anyways.
and because they want to have the idea you are local