Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Infosys plans to hire 10,000 American workers amid crackdown on H-1B visas

- Stephen Nellis and Sankalp Phartiyal letters@hindustant­imes.com

IT services firm Infosys Ltd said it plans to hire 10,000 US workers in the next two years and open four technology centres in the US, starting with a centre this August in Indiana, the home state of US vicepresid­ent Mike Pence.

The move comes at a time when Infosys and some of its Indian peers such as Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd and Wipro Ltd have become political targets in the US for allegedly displacing US workers’ jobs by flying in foreigners on temporary visas to service their clients in the country.

The IT service firms rely heavily on the H-1B visa programme, which US President Donald Trump has ordered federal agencies to review.

In a telephone interview with Reuters from Indiana, Infosys CEO Vishal Sikka said his company plans to hire US workers in fields such as artificial intelligen­ce. “When you think about it from a US point of view, obviously creating more American jobs and opportunit­ies is a good thing.”

While Indian outsourcin­g firms have recruited in the US, Infosys is the first to come out with concrete hiring numbers and provide a timeline in the wake of Trump’s visa review.

Last month, two industry sources told Reuters that Infosys was applying for just under 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 H-1B recipients annually.Indian politician­s and IT industry heads have been lobbying US lawmakers and officials from the Trump administra­tion to not make changes to visa rules, as this could hurt India’s $150-billion IT services sector.

The 10,000 new US jobs would be a small part of Infosys’ overall workforce of more than 200,000.

Sikka said Infosys has already hired 2,000 US workers as part of a previous effort started in 2014.

“We started small at first and have been growing since then,” Sikka said. “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. It is independen­t of the regulation­s and the visas.”

The four hubs being set up will not only have technology and innovation focus areas, but will also closely serve clients in sectors such as financial services, manufactur­ing, healthcare, retail and energy, said Infosys.

The first hub, which will open in Indiana in August 2017, is expected to create 2,000 jobs by 2021, the company said.

Infosys did not disclose the financial impact of its plans. It declined to comment on if the planned US jobs would account for a large percentage of overall hiring in the coming two years.

Based on Infosys’s recent hiring trends, however, the planned hirings in the US could account for a substantia­l portion of the company’s net workforce additions over the period.

Infosys, which added nearly 18,000 jobs in 2015, slowed its hiring pace considerab­ly, creating just about 6,000 jobs in 2016 amid market uncertaint­y caused by Brexit and heightened clamour for tougher US immigratio­n laws that led some US clients to holdoff on new projects.

“Hiring locally is a compulsion and it’s not just because of what’s happening in the US,” said Harit Shah, research analyst at Reliance Securities. “The model itself is not sustainabl­e,” Shah said.

REUTERS

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? CEO Vishal Sikka said Infosys plans to hire US workers in fields such as artificial intelligen­ce.
MINT/FILE CEO Vishal Sikka said Infosys plans to hire US workers in fields such as artificial intelligen­ce.

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