India's high-tech world short of trained workers
Indian high-tech firms' shortfall of 500,000 technology professionals by 2010 could see big rise in wages.
Instead, graduates are leaving universities that are mired in theory classes and sometimes so poorly funded, they don't have computer labs. Even students from the best colleges can be dulled by cram schools and left without the most basic communication skills, according to industry leaders. So the country's voracious high-tech companies, desperate for ever-increasing numbers of staffers to fill their ranks have to go hunting.
``The problem is not a shortage of people,'' said Mohandas Pai, human resources chief for Infosys Technologies, the software giant that built and runs the Mysore campus for its new employees. ``It's a shortage of trained people.'' From the outside, this nation of 1.03 billion, with its immense English-speaking population, may appear to have a bottomless supply of cheap workers with enough education to claim more outsourced Western jobs but things look far different in India, where technology companies are spending hundreds of millions of dollars in a frantic attempt to ensure their profit-making machine keeps producing.
``This is really the Achilles heel of the industry,'' said James Friedman, an analyst with Susquehanna Financial Group, a U.S.-based investment firm, who has studied the issue. ``When we first started covering the industry, in 2000, there were maybe 50,000 jobs and 500,000 applicants,'' he said. Now there are perhaps 180,000 annual openings, but only between 100,000 and 200,000 qualified candidates. For now, industry is keeping up, but only barely. A powerful trade group, the National Association of Software Services Companies, or NASSCOM, estimates a potential shortfall of 500,000 technology professionals by 2010. On the most basic level, it's a problem of success. The high-tech industry is expanding so fast that the population can't keep up with the demand for high-end workers. Tata Consultancy Services, for instance, India's largest software company, hires around 3,000 people a month. The consulting firm Accenture plans to hire 8,000 in the next six months and IBM says it will bring on more than 50,000 additional people in India by 2010.
A shortage means something feared here-higher wages. Much of India's success rests on the fact that its legions of software programmers work for far less than those in the West, often for one-fourth the salary. If industry can't find enough workers to keep wages low, the companies that look to India for things like software development will turn to competitors, from Poland to the Philippines, and the entire industry could stumble.
The responses range from private `finishing schools' polishing the computer skills of new graduates to multimillion-dollar partnerships spanning business, government and higher education. The biggest companies have built elaborate training centers. The Mysore campus, for instance, was little more than scrub-filled fields when Infosys, India's second-largest software firm, based in the nearby technology hub of Bangalore, began building here in earnest three years ago.
In America, the campus would be nothing unusual. But in India, with its electricity outages, poverty and mountains of garbage, the walled-in corporate fantasy-land, watched over by armed guards, is anything but normal. It has 120 faculty members, more than 80 buildings, 2,350 hostel rooms and a 500,000-square-foot (46,451-square-meter) education
complex. There's a movie complex built inside a geodesic dome. An army of workers sweeps the already-spotless streets and trims the already-perfect lawns. Month by month, it's getting bigger. Today, some 4,500 students at a time attend the 16-week course for new employees. By September, there will be space for 13,000.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.