Really, that's the same sort of argument that a Walmart can make when it moves into a town. In the final analysis, if all a company can provide is jobs in the sales and distribution arm for what it sells in a place (that is, there's no real value added in the place you're selling to), all that's really happening is that money is being extracted from that place.
It's kind of like the difference in economic health you get by choosing between a non-locally owned casino and a light manufacturing plant in your town. One brings in money, the other one sends it out. In this case, the 'town' is the entire country.
I can't say that I blame people for, on the one hand, bargaining (sometimes collectively in the case of .gov employees) for as high a wage as they can get and on the other hand, wanting to buy goods absolutely as cheaply as possible regardless of who is on the other side of the transaction...but the overall health of the system is bound to go in the ******* if more goes out than comes in. I suppose we're OK as long as the Chinese just keep buying bonds and let them pile up someplace. The likely end game will be massive devaluation of the currency I'm afraid. All that, just to be able to buy cheap Salad Shooters(tm) at Walmart.