Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, and Wipro expanded their global workforces by an average of 5.1 percent last quarter.
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India’s top three outsourcing companies are ramping up hiring as global corporations, mainly from the U.S., send more work offshore to cut costs as they emerge from the downturn. Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, and Wipro expanded their global workforces by an average of 5.1 percent last quarter, together adding 16,701 employees, company documents show — an early sign that the Great Recession may ultimately benefit India as cost-conscious companies outsource more work, just as they did after the dot-com bust. “Our expectations are for flat to marginally stronger IT budgets with a greater share of offshore spend,” according to Wipro chairman Azim Premji. “Our customers remain focused on cost reduction.
“When there is a downturn the compulsion to control costs increases,” said Dipen Shah, an analyst at Mumbai’s Kotak Securities. “The demand for offshoring will increase. That will play to the advantage of Indian IT companies.” He argues that the cost savings from offshoring has helped U.S. companies survive — and that’s good for the American worker. “You might say jobs in the U.S. are getting displaced by jobs in India, but because of the value provided by Indian companies and lower costs, there are firms who are able to keep their heads above water and continue to employ their existing employees,” he said. TCS, Infosys and Wipro reported stronger than expected results for the December quarter, with revenue and volume growth, signaling that the cost-cutting imperative of this last, lean year may be over for India’s $60 billion software services industry. After about a year of hiring slowdowns, all three companies are sweetening compensation as the fight to hold on to talented employees in India heats up. Infosys offered its Indian employees an average 8 percent pay hike in October, their first raise since April 2008, and executives said last week they are considering another raise to combat rising attrition. It recently raised its gross hiring target for the second time this fiscal year, to 24,000 people. Tata Consultancy Services has paid out 150 percent of performance-linked pay — which normally amounts to 20 to 45 percent of compensation — for the last two quarters, and executives say they will raise salaries next quarter, after a year-long wage freeze. (AP) |
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