Indian IT trade group
Nasscom predicts the country's
IT industry will be worth a trillion dollars by 2020 as western economies
increasingly exploit next-generation offshore services to tackle skills
shortages caused by an aging population.
Speaking at a roundtable event in London yesterday (31 July), B Ramalinga
Raju, chairman of both Nasscom and IT services giant Satyam, said the Indian IT
industry was on track to be worth $60bn a year by 2010 and could potentially be
worth a trillion dollars by 2020. He said high growth rates would be possible as
Indian operations expand to offer more high-value and industry-specific
services.
Phiroz Vandrevala, executive vice president at Tata Consultancy Services
(TCS) and a member of the Nasscom Executive Council, agreed next-generation
offshore services would grow. He claimed this was already happening, and western
customers were increasingly interested in new infrastructure services. "It was
always thought datacentre services would largely be provided on-site, but firms
have realised more and more datacentre tasks and other infrastructure services
can be handled offshore," he said.
Vandrevala predicted other high-value business processes, such as human
resources, finance and legal functions, would also be moved to India. Nasscom
president Kiran Karnik added that engineering services at Indian sites - where
complex system and product design work is undertaken - are also proving
increasingly popular.
This trend for more complex offshore services will be driven by demographic
requirements as much as cost concerns, according to Vandrevala. "More and more
developed economies do not have [large enough] populations to provide the
services they need," he said. "That means they either have to open up borders
and move people in - which will not happen - or move services across the border.
There will be an evolution of the market - services that today would be
inconceivable to offshore will be moved."
However, Nasscom admitted that the success of Indian service centres was
being undermined by ongoing infrastructure problems in the country. "There is an
absence of assured power, which makes providing 24x7 services more difficult,
and an absence of adequate public transport system, which means we have to
provide staff with transport to work," said Vandrevala. "These inefficiencies
are built into our business model, so if you can get the infrastructure in place
you can increase the productivity and profitability of the industry."
Raju admitted there was a problem with infrastructure, but said the
government was taking steps to tackle the problem. "We believe the next few
years will witness massive infrastructure improvements because the frameworks
are in place for the private sector to come in and address the problems," he
said. "Private industry can now provide 100 percent of the investment and it has
been made far easier to acquire land."
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