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Kolkata: Software industry body, Nasscom expects at least 70,000-80,000
engineering graduates who passed out in June 2009 and were offered jobs
in their 5th and 6th semesters by TCS, Infosys and Accenture, among
others, to get absorbed by March 2010. Not too long ago, there were
apprehensions that the appointments of these tech grads could get
deferred till 2011 in the aftermath of the global slowdown. However,
the perception appears to have changed.
Speaking to Economic Times, Nasscom Vice-President Sangeeta Gupta said,
"There's some amount of pick-up in IT spending and clients have become
active in the decision-making process. This augurs well for the IT
industry and is likely to result in hiring by IT companies. Companies
like TCS, Infosys and Accenture, among others, are expected to start
honouring the offers they made. As a result, at least 70k-80k
engineering graduates, who were issued offer letters, are expected to
get absorbed by March 2010."
For instance, the country's biggest software firm Tata Consultancy
Services (TCS) had made some 24,000 offers in 2008-09, according to its
Q2 analyst call. The company had indicated that it would honour these
offers this fiscal. In Q3, TCS is expected to absorb about 8,000-odd,
and the balance, in the following quarter. Till Q2, the company had
absorbed some 1,800 people.
Similarly, Infosys, in its Q2 earnings call, indicated that it would
add 20,000 people instead of 18,000 indicated earlier. The additional
2,000 would be partly in BPO while the rest would make up laterals at
Infosys Technologies.
Incidentally, Nasscom has urged member companies to recruit those
who've completed their eighth semester to ensure that hiring is closer
to the need of companies. For this fiscal, Nasscom has projected a mere
4-7 percent export growth. It is likely, that with IT sector showing
signs of recovery, Nasscom will review the export target. "We can
review the export target by end- December," she added.
McKinsey in its report titled 'Perspectives in the IT industry by
2020', has noted that with the current pace of reforms and expected
constraints in talent and infrastructure supply, the exports component
of the Indian IT industry is slated to reach $175 billion in revenues
by 2020. The domestic component will contribute $50 billion in revenues
by 2020, which is larger than the total export revenues for India now.
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