Technology & Innovation

Coping with India’s talent crunch

September 17, 2009

Global

September 17, 2009

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Rising international competition and the demand for more valueadded services means that India’s IT outsourcers need talent in spades. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s biggest IT company, now employs 14 0,000 workers and is striving to ensure that the supply of skilled, low-cost labour does not run dry.

A shortage, however, is a real possibility. According to a report commissioned by the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), India is facing an IT talent shortfall of between 800,000 and 1.2m workers by 2012. TCS is trying to ward this off by cultivating the domestic skills pool. It remains actively engaged with academic institutions and augments its own training programmes through close collaboration with universities throughout India. Moreover, its rivals are following suit. According to a new report from the World Bank,2 Infosys has invested more than US$120m in a Global Education Centre in Mysore that can train up to 13 ,500 workers at a time. Satyam is also working with more than 100 universities on training initiatives and course design.

Nevertheless, given concerns that India may not be able to satisfy the appetite of its outsourcers for new staff in the future, and the opening up of other labour markets where costs are even lower than in India, companies like TCS have increasingly been looking abroad to fill new positions. TCS now employs 14,000 people outside India, around 10% of its total workforce, having had fewer than 100 non-Indian workers just five years ago.

There are other good reasons to look further afield, according to AS Lakshminarayanan, vice-president and head of Europe for TCS. The company opened offices in Latin America primarily to serve Latin American customers with a need for Spanish-speaking workers. It has moved into Budapest in Hungary partly to ensure compliance with EU data privacy laws when catering to European companies. Although Mr Lakshminarayanan resists using the word protectionism, he says there is certain sensitivity about where some work is done. This is one reason that TCS employs about 4,500 workers in the UK.

The main attractions of any new business environment, however, continue to be quality, scale and cost, notes Mr Lakshminarayanan, and very rarely are all three to be found in one place. A low-cost environment and skilled IT workforce have attracted TCS to markets like the Philippines and Egypt; yet even in such populous countries it does not believe there is a sufficient supply of new labour. Despite NASSCOM’s worries, when it comes to the key workforce factors, maintains Mr Lakshminarayanan, India retains an advantage over other parts of the world.

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