The Jerusalem Post

Infosys plans to hire 10,000 US workers after Trump targets outsourcin­g firms

- • By STEPHEN NELLIS and SANKALP PHARTIYAL

SAN FRANCISCO/MUMBAI (Reuters) – India-based IT services firm Infosys Ltd. plans to hire 10,000 US workers in the next two years and open four technology centers in the United States, starting with a center this August in Indiana, the home state of US Vice President Mike Pence.

The move comes as Infosys and some of its Indian peers such as Tata Consultanc­y Services and Wipro Ltd. have become political targets in the United States and have been accused of displacing US workers’ jobs by flying in foreigners on temporary visas to service US clients.

The IT service firms advise large companies on tech issues and carry out a range of tasks for them, including managing back-end computing systems and high-level programmin­g. They rely heavily on the H1-B visa program, which US President Donald Trump told federal agencies to review.

Other Indian outsourcin­g firms have recruited in the US, but Infosys is the first to give concrete hiring numbers and a timeline for its plans following Trump’s visa review.

The move marks a huge increase in US hiring by Infosys. In 2014, when Vishal Sikka became chief executive, the firm had said it would hire 2,000 people in the US.

In a telephone interview with Reuters from Indiana, Sikka said Infosys had achieved that goal and now wants to hire US workers in fields such as artificial intelligen­ce, cloud and big data.

“The reality is bringing in local talent and mixing that with the best of global talent in the times we are living in, and the times we’re entering is the right thing to do,” he said.

Sikka said the timing of the decision was not related to the visa review. The company started active talks with Indiana in late February, deputy chief operating officer Ravi Kumar told reporters in Indiana.

“More and more as we look at the future, we have to decrease the dependency on visas,” Sikka told CNBC on Tuesday. “That is something we have been working on for the last two and a half years.”

The 10,000 new US jobs will form a small part of Infosys’s overall workforce of more than 200,000.

Infosys did not give details on specific jobs it would bring to the US, but it said it would seek experience­d tech profession­als and recent graduates from universiti­es and community colleges.

Kumar said some of the Indiana jobs would likely come from nearby universiti­es such as Notre Dame and Ball State, and they would chiefly serve the company’s US manufactur­ing, pharmaceut­ical and life-sciences clients in the US.

Infosys did not say where the other three tech centers would be located.

FEWER H1-Bs

Last month, two industry sources told Reuters that Infosys was applying for just less than 1,000 H-1B visas this year. One of the sources said that was down from about 6,500 applicatio­ns in 2016 and some 9,000 in 2015.

Indian IT service firms, which typically flood the lottery system each year with thousands of applicatio­ns, have been among the largest H1-B recipients annually.

US politician­s accuse IT firms of paying workers just enough to meet the minimum wage of $60,000 a year required for the visa, well below others in the US tech sector. Indian industry lobby group NASSCOM says the average salary paid by Indian IT Service firms for H-1B visa holders is about $82,000.

Analysts said more US hirings would push up costs for Indian IT firms as they chase people with the right skills.

“The supply of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s skills is not that much in the US, so to get the right talent, they might have to pay higher salaries,” PhillipCap­ital analyst Shyamal Dhruve said.

Indian politician­s and IT industry heads have been lobbying US lawmakers and officials from the Trump administra­tion not to make drastic changes to visa rules, as this could hurt India’s $150 billion IT service sector.

The four US hubs Infosys plans would focus on technology and innovation as well as serve clients in financial services, manufactur­ing, health care, retail and energy, the firm said.

The first hub, which would open in Indiana in August, is expected to create 2,000 jobs by 2021, Infosys said. Kumar said it would hire 500 of those people in the state by 2018.

UNSUSTAINA­BLE MODEL

Infosys did not disclose the cost of its plans or say whether its US jobs plan would account for a large percentage of its overall hiring in the coming two years.

Based on Infosys’s recent trends, the US plan could account for a large portion of net hiring additions in the period.

Infosys added nearly 18,000 jobs in 2015 but just 6,000 in 2016 amid uncertaint­y about the impact of Brexit and calls from some US politician­s and the public for tougher US immigratio­n rules that led some US clients to hold off on new projects.

“Hiring locally is a compulsion, and it’s not just because of what’s happening in the US,” Reliance Securities research analyst Harit Shah said, adding that bringing in workers on temporary visas was “not sustainabl­e” as a model.

Last month, the company said it would struggle to reach its ambitious $20b. revenue target by 2020, as the Indian software service sector has been hit by cautious client spending due to a rising protection­ist wave globally.

The US is the largest market for Indian software service companies. Other countries, such as Australia, have also started to target Indian IT service companies that use temporary-visa programs.

 ?? (Abhishek N. Chinnappa/Reuters) ?? AN EMPLOYEE stands at the front desk of Infosys headquarte­rs in Bengaluru, India, last year. Infosys and some of its Indian peers have become political targets in the United States and have been accused of displacing US workers’ jobs by flying in...
(Abhishek N. Chinnappa/Reuters) AN EMPLOYEE stands at the front desk of Infosys headquarte­rs in Bengaluru, India, last year. Infosys and some of its Indian peers have become political targets in the United States and have been accused of displacing US workers’ jobs by flying in...

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