Bosses tend to be number crunchers. If you can prove that it's costing them time, money, quality (to the end user/customer) and morale of the developers (yes, some bosses will see morale as currency too!) then you will have a very convincing argument for change. You can spend that money in OT pay to your developers to get the work done in-house and in-standards. You could use that money to hire an internal lower-skilled resource that you could train up to replace the cheap 3rd party developers and you'd only be helping yourself.
If all that fails, then at least you've got an answer for the interviewer at your next job when they ask you why you left.
I'm speaking from experience here. At my last company we used offshore developers who were fairly skilled for the rates we were paying them. However, we were also spending hours educating them, fixing their errors, working around their code and that meant that we were most definitely not benefiting from their lower rates. The overhead of managing those resources ended up being more than what it would have taken to do the job in house which would have resulted in a better, "more-cohesive" result. So, the payoff after months of trying to make various offshoring partnerships work was that our offshore developers were paid to be trained by higher salaried developers and our company went bankrupt. Offshoring wasn't the only reason we went bankrupt, but it did much more harm than good.
I hope my experience isn't typical, as I'm sure that offshore development with the same shop over time would eventually become mutually beneficial, but you have to have extremely deep pockets up front to cover initial losses.
