U.S. retailers oppose FCC plan to onshore call centers

WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES — The United States National Retail Federation is pushing back against a Federal Communications Commission proposal that would force foreign call center operations back to the United States, calling the plan ignorant, bureaucratic, and unnecessary.
According to a report from Broadband Breakfast, the trade group, which represents Walmart, Target, and other major retailers, said the rule would create needless regulatory hurdles without meaningfully improving service for American consumers.
Retail group slams rule as bureaucratic overreach
In a sharply worded statement, the NRF said the proposal may look consumer-friendly on the surface but ignores how customer service actually operates.
“On paper, it sounds ‘pro-consumer.’ In practice, it reflects a stunning lack of understanding of how customer service actually works,” the organization wrote in the report.
The federation warned that the mandate would disrupt staffing strategies and pile on administrative work without producing real benefits for callers.
Forced transfers, rigid staffing caps, and added compliance burdens, it argued, do not translate to better customer outcomes.
The pushback signals broader business community concern that the FCC’s approach prioritizes optics over operational reality, particularly for large retailers handling millions of customer interactions each year across multiple time zones and service channels.
FCC cites consumer frustration with offshore support
The FCC framed the proposal as a response to longstanding complaints about language barriers when dealing with offshore agents. The rule is designed to ensure call center workers are proficient in English.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr defended the plan, citing persistent consumer frustration with offshore call handling.
“Americans get frustrated when they call a U.S. business and end up connecting with a call center located abroad,” Carr said in a statement, adding that language and communications barriers often make it difficult for callers to quickly resolve their issues.
Supporters argue clearer communication standards would improve consumer outcomes, while critics counter that market incentives already drive retailers to invest heavily in agent training and quality assurance.
The proposed rule has opened a rare public fault line between federal regulators and a powerful retail lobby over how customer service should be governed.
The FCC’s move lands at a sensitive moment for the global outsourcing industry, which has spent the past decade expanding beyond cost arbitrage into higher-value services such as analytics, digital customer experience, and AI-enabled support.
Offshore hubs in the Philippines, India, and Latin America have absorbed a significant share of U.S. retail customer service volume, and any policy signaling a reshoring push could ripple across vendor contracts, workforce planning, and long-term investment decisions.
While regulatory pressure may nudge some work onshore, the economics of large-scale contact center operations still favor hybrid, multi-shore delivery models — suggesting the NRF’s fight is less about defending offshoring than preserving operational flexibility.

Independent




