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India outsourcing firms report surge in hiring

Growth in IT employment overseas could lead to rate increases for U.S. customers

October 15, 2004 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - In quarterly reports released this week, three big India-based offshore outsourcing companies detailed sharp increases in employee head count, clear evidence of growing demand for offshore services. Analysts say this demand is increasing wages in India by double digits and raising the potential of rate increases for U.S. customers.
For now, at least, competition in India is keeping billing rates stable. But analysts say that won't continue indefinitely as competition for experienced employees increases.
In a quarterly report released today, Wipro Ltd. said its workforce rose by nearly 18%, adding 5,546 employees in the three-month quarter that ended Sept. 30, to bring its total to 37,063. For the same period one year earlier, the company reported 24,500 employees.
For the same period, Infosys Technologies Ltd. said this week that its workforce grew from 27,939 employees to 32,949 employees, also an 18% increase. One year ago, Infosys had 18,580 employees.
For the same quarter, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. said its head count had climbed nearly 12%, from 36,636 to 40,948. In June 2003, Tata reported 24,000 employees.
"Bangalore today is like Silicon Valley was five years ago," said Lance Travis, an analyst at AMR Research Inc. in Boston.
The growth in overseas IT employment is coming from demand from U.S. companies. Stamford, Conn.-based Meta Group Inc. said the use of offshore services by U.S. companies will grow at about 20% a year through 2008.
Meta Group estimates U.S. spending on offshore services at $10 billion this year, and that's with 55% of U.S. companies not using any offshore services, according to Dane Anderson, a Meta Group analyst.
This demand is driving up salary rates in India by about 14% this year, especially for experienced workers, said Eugene Kublanov, an analyst at outsourcing consulting firm NeoIT Inc. in San Ramon, Calif.
An experienced Indian programmer making $7,400 this year can expect to earn about $8,500 next year. By 2010, that same employee may be making double that, Kublanov said.
To cover these increases, service providers will have to shrink profit margins, improve efficiency and add more sophisticated IT services that allow them to charge more. While India application development rates remain roughly a third of U.S. costs, they are creeping up to about $19 to $20 per hour for software development this year, up from $17 to $18 an hour last year, Kublanov said.
But competition for employees, as well as the threat of increasing turnover, is prompting companies to try different approaches to recruiting and retaining workers.
At its Hyderabad, India,



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