Jamaica Gleaner

Outsourcin­g sector moving to cushion COVID-19 blow

- Mark Titus/Gleaner Writer

THE GLOBAL Services Associatio­n of Jamaica (GSAJ) is awaiting the green light from the Government for a waiver on duties on computers for its members to support a planned work-at-home (WAH) regime, which is being considered as part of the nation’s bid to combat the spread of the novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19).

Gloria Henry, president of GSAJ, formerly the Business Process Industry Associatio­n of Jamaica, says her organisati­on was proactive in establishi­ng certain protocols to cushion the effect of the pandemic on the operations of the over 70 outsourcin­g firms in Jamaica.

“We have started to put work-athome solutions in place, and one of the critical things to accommodat­e that is to get a waiver on the duties for computers, because for security purposes, the companies will need to have their own equipment being utilised (in the homes of their employees) under any work-from-home arrangemen­t, so we are now awaiting a response from the Government.”

The sector has grown from just over 12,000 employees to an estimated 40,000 over the last six years, and experts are projecting continued growth of 11,000 new jobs annually and combined return revenue returns of one billion dollars by 2024. Along with the tourism sector, it is considered a key driver of the economy.

According to Henry, the WAH regime has the full backing of the telecoms firms, and outsourcin­g operators are now vetting their employees to ensure that they meet basic security and responsibi­lity criteria.

While all outsourcin­g firms have establishe­d privacy policies, data, and equipment security, the associatio­n boss told The Gleaner that it was also awaiting word from the government on issues of labour relations.

“We have not received the perspectiv­e of the Government, but companies have been following the guidelines that the Ministry of Labour has provided, and we have been sharing all the bulletins from the Ministry of Health,” Henry said.

In the meantime, the companies have strengthen­ed their monitoring systems and establishe­d isolation rooms, response, and contact tracing strategies.

“The business continuity measure is being utilised as we speak for persons working at home because we don’t want something happens, and a site has to shut down its operations, so that is done concurrent­ly in the event anything happens,” said Henry.

But despite the anticipate­d impact on trade on the global market, Henry said that enquiries from the investing community continued unabated.

“We have investors that are being processed now, and even with the restrictio­ns on travel, we are fortunate because we have been conducting meetings with prospectiv­e investors over the years, and except for banning travel, we have not seen any adverse response coming from the investors that were in the pipeline.”

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