Oman Daily Observer

Indian IT industry faces twin challenges

- SANKALP PHARTIYAL & PROMIT MUKHERJEE

Automation and the new US administra­tion were the big unknowns at the Indian tech sector’s annual shindig this week, with machines threatenin­g to take away thousands of jobs and concerns over possible visa rule changes in the key American market. But senior executives from the $150 billion industry, which rose to prominence at the turn of the century by helping Western firms solve the “Y2K” bug, said companies with skilled English-speaking staff and low costs could not be written off yet.

The sector, led by Tata Consultanc­y Services, Infosys Ltd and Wipro Ltd, is lobbying hard as the new US administra­tion under President Donald Trump considers putting in place visa restrictio­ns.

The administra­tion may also raise salaries paid to H1-B visa holders, a move that could significan­tly increase costs for IT companies that are already facing pressure on margins.

The longer-term challenge and opportunit­y for the sector was automation, executives said, as global corporatio­ns from plane-makers to consumer firms bet on the use of machines to further cut costs and boost efficiency.

That threatens lower-end software services and outsourcin­g jobs in a sector which employs more than 3.5 million people.

Summing up the mood at the three-day NASSCOM leadership event in Mumbai ending on Friday, Malcolm Frank, Chief Strategy Officer at Cognizant which has most of its operations in India, spoke of “fear and optimism.” Even top IT executives were “fearing the machines”, he said.

Some Indian executives, including Infosys’ Chief Operating Officer Pravin Rao, said that greater automation was expected to help engineers and developers shed repetitive jobs for more creative roles.

“Some part of the work we’ll be automating 100 per cent, you don’t require people to do that kind of work,” Rao said. “But there are always newer things, where we will be able to re-purpose employees who are released from those areas.”

With rapidly changing technology, Indian IT firms are emphasisin­g the need for retraining their workforce, in many cases setting up experience centres and learning zones on their sprawling campuses.

Some companies are partnering with universiti­es to design and fund education programs, while staff members spoke of employers laying on training and webinars to help develop skills in automation and cloud computing.

“The threat from automation killing jobs is more than Trump’s anticipate­d visa rule changes,” a general manager-level employee at a top Indian IT firm said.

NASSCOM Chairman and Tech Mahindra CEO CP Gurnani said technology would create new roles where “man will manage machines,” even if a fourth of Indian IT jobs were to be replaced by machines over the next four years.

Hiring patterns may also change, with unconventi­onal, high-value graduates likely to be more attractive, to the possible detriment of hiring from India’s engineerin­g colleges.

Infosys, which traditiona­lly recruited only engineerin­g graduates, is considerin­g hiring people educated in liberal arts to add creative skills to its workforce, COO Rao said.

In a first, NASSCOM (National Associatio­n of Software and Services Companies), the leading Indian IT lobby group, delayed its initial growth forecast for fiscal 2017/18, citing market uncertaint­y.

NASSCOM officials said it had deferred its prediction­s by three months to give it time to gauge policy announceme­nts in the United States which could make immigratio­n rules tougher.

The industry body aims to announce a firmer growth forecast after the quarter to March when IT companies report annual earnings and give guidance for the next fiscal year.

 ?? — Reuters ?? IT workers are seen at their workstatio­ns on the floor of an outsourcin­g centre in Bangalore.
— Reuters IT workers are seen at their workstatio­ns on the floor of an outsourcin­g centre in Bangalore.

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