Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Placements at IITs take a beating

Recruitmen­t dipped sharply within a year

- Neelam Pandey neelam.pandey@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: One of every three IITians graduating this year either didn’t find a suitable job or wasn’t found suitable for a job through campus placement, official data show, pointing to shrinking employment opportunit­ies for India’s large pool of engineerin­g talent.

Only 66% of those who made themselves available for campus recruitmen­t landed a job offer in 2016-17, as against 79% in 2015-16 and 78% in 2014-15, according to data made available by IITs to the human resource developmen­t (HRD) ministry. Out of 9,104 student in 17 IITs who applied this year, only 6,013 got jobs.

The data for placement was shared by 17 IITs.

There are 75,000 students studying in 23 IITs in the country.

The slide in recruitmen­t from what are considered our premier technical institutes reflects the possible impact of the economic downturn in India as also globally. India’s estimated economic growth has slowed to 7.1% in 2016-17 from 7.9% in the previous year. Larsen & Toubro Ltd, for instance, laid off 14,000 employees during April-September last year, saying it was necessary to stay agile and competitiv­e. Many companies in the manufactur­ing and constructi­on sectors slashed jobs in November-January to protect their profit margins post demo net is at ion. A wave of protection­ist steps by countries such as the United States has further hit the services sector, especially IT companies. The top seven IT firms in India are reportedly planning to lay off at least 56,000 engineers.

“There is an increase in the number of IITs but the jobs have remained the same. Naturally jobs have been distribute­d amongst all the IITs,” Professor NP Padhy, dean of academic affairs, IIT Roorkee told HT. “At the same time, the new IITs were given an opportunit­y to start the placement drive much earlier than the rest to help them. Also, the number of start-ups that participat­ed earlier has also come down. Many students also opt for higher studies,” he said.

IIT sources say that while the number of companies visiting IITs has increased in many cases, job offers have decreased. In IIT Madras, which topped the National Ranking of the country’s engineerin­g institutes, of the 665 students who were available for campus placements, 521 got job offers, with an average salary of ~12.91 lakh per annum.

That is to say that only 78% of the students who wanted jobs got the offers, as against 86 % in the previous two years.

“Our placement drive was disrupted due to the cyclone this year and so there might have been a slight drop,” said Bhaskar Ramamurthy, IIT Madras director.

IIT Roorkee managed to place 653 of 974 campus job-seekers this year; that is 67% compared to 83% last year. Of the old IITs, only the one in Kanpur showed a slight improvemen­t in campus placements this year.

In IIT Delhi, 502 of 563 students got job offers. Officials of the institute, however, said the data might see a slight increase as the placements are still on. “There are a number of students who opt for higher studies or sit for civil services. Many start their own startups and so not everyone opts for campus placement. At the same time, jobs are not increasing and we are a mere facilitato­r between the companies and the students. As far as we know, anyone from IIT Delhi looking for a job will be able to get one,” said a senior official of IIT Delhi.

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