Maybe higher salaries will kill Indian IT industry - maybe new areas like 
Guwahati can come up where hi-tech people are ready to work at half/quarter 
price compared to Bangalore - subletting of outsourcing from the US.
Umesh
PS: Bangalore has long been the costliest city in India - followed by desert 
based Jaipur, Ajmer etc( where food has to be brought in from outside).


The New Economics of Outsourcing    Efforts to send IT work anywhere but 
Bangalore are taking on added urgency as costs of doing work in India rise and 
the dollar sinks   
by Rachael King
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2008/tc2008043_531737.htm




 Softtek, a Monterrey (Mexico) provider of IT services, added 30 new clients 
last year. Most of them had been using Indian firms for at least part of their 
outsourced IT. But they came to Softtek because they "were looking for 
something else," says Beni Lopez, CEO of nearshore services for the company, 
which has operations around the world. 
 Companies that traditionally rely on India for offshore IT services have been 
looking for that something beyond India for years, citing such reasons as high 
employee turnover and unreliable communications. But the search has taken on 
added urgency recently, especially for U.S. companies, as a weakening dollar 
has boosted the cost of IT services priced in India's rupee. Over the past five 
years the dollar has declined about 16% against the rupee. High real estate 
costs and expectations for tax increases also have diminished India's allure. 
 As outsourcing to India becomes more expensive, North American companies are 
more inclined to "nearsource," keeping work in the Western Hemisphere, where 
they can operate in a closer time zone. In years past a company could save 40% 
to 50% by hiring Indian firms to handle IT and other services, says Atul 
Vashistha, chairman at neoIT, a management consulting firm. Should the U.S. 
dollar continue its descent, that differential would shrink to 10% to 20%, he 
estimates. "If you're only going to have a 20% savings, clients start to think 
about time zone," Vashistha says. 
 Argentina's Time Zone Advantage  Kimberly-Clark (KMB) had time zone in mind 
when it hired Cognizant Technology Solutions in Buenos Aires to handle tech 
support for its SAP (SAP) software applications. 
 Kimberly-Clark was drawn by the available talent and the fact that the company 
has Argentine operations but also because geographical proximity and similar 
time zones make collaboration easier. "We picked Buenos Aires for a number of 
reasons, but we really felt from supporting SAP, it was the right place to be," 
says Kimberly-Clark Chief Information Officer Ramon Baez. The company also 
outsources application development and maintenance to Cognizant in Chennai, 
India. 
  How much longer the world's companies will have financial incentive to 
outsource to India is a matter of lively debate. India's "advantage as an 
offshore location is fast eroding—its attractiveness takes a hit with each 
passing day," analysts at Forrester Research (FORR) wrote in a January, 2008, 
report. Forrester catalogued some of the well-known challenges, such as 
increasing staffing costs, turnover and strained infrastructure 
(BusinessWeek.com, 12/11/06). Yet, there are newer challenges as well, 
including the falling dollar and expected tax revisions that may increase the 
cost of relying on outsourcing providers. 

India's Cost Differential Fast Eroding  Contracts are written in dollars, and 
as much as 60% to 80% of Indian service providers' revenue is in U.S. dollars, 
but more than half of their costs are incurred in rupees, according to an 
October report from Forrester. Indian outsourcing powerhouses like Wipro are 
feeling the squeeze. They've strived to cut costs, and now they're raising 
prices to keep margins from narrowing further. "We are relentlessly driving for 
higher pricing for our services and have seen price increases from our 
customers in the range of 3% to 6%, and our new customers are coming in at 
around 5% higher than our average," Wipro Chairman Azim Premji said on a 
conference call with investors on Jan. 18. 
 Duke University professor Arie Lewin estimates that the benefit of doing 
business, from a labor-cost point of view, in such locales as Bangalore, India, 
will disappear for some companies in three to four years. That's due to a 
combination of dollar depreciation, wage inflation, and other costs. Others say 
it will take longer. "Costs are escalating, so the level of labor arbitrage 
isn't as great as it used to be, but that's not to say labor arbitrage is 
disappearing, nor will it disappear in the next 10 years or so," says Sid Pai, 
partner and managing director of TPI India, a sourcing advisory firm. 
  Indeed, while costs are increasing in India, the country is generally less 
expensive than Latin America and most other locations, especially for companies 
that don't require high-end software developers. The average annual salary for 
an IT worker in the U.S. is about $75,000, according to a late 2007 report by 
Alsbridge, an outsourcing consulting firm. In India it's about $7,779 and in 
Argentina, it's slightly higher at $9,478. In Brazil, the annual wage jumps to 
$13,163, and in Mexico it climbs to $17,899. "The bottom line is that there 
aren't great alternatives with the scale, quality, price structure, and the 
lack of risk of India," says Stephanie Moore, vice-president at Forrester. 
 Spreading Out Work In Several Nations Even Lopez acknowledges that Latin 
America can't approximate India's scale. Mexico, for instance, has about 
500,000 IT workers and graduates an additional 65,000 each year. Last year in 
India there were more than 1.6 million IT workers employed; an additional 
495,000 graduate each year, according to NASSCOM, an IT trade group in India. 
Instead, Lopez envisions Mexico and the rest of Latin America acting as a 
complement to India and other offshore locations. 
 Recognizing that it may not be a good idea to locate all outsourcing in one 
country, or even a single region, many companies spread work among several 
sites. On Mar. 31, Royal Dutch Shell announced a $4 billion outsourcing 
arrangement. The oil company awarded about one-fourth of the total to 
Electronic Data Systems (EDS), which over five years will handle computing 
services for 150,000 users in more than 100 countries. The bulk of the work 
will be done in 4 places, the Netherlands, Britain, Malaysia, and the U.S. 
While EDS has thousands of workers in India and some of the work could possibly 
be done there, the company is actually hiring 1,000 workers in Malaysia for 
this project, an EDS spokesperson says. 
 Increasingly, companies want a provider that can nimbly shift tasks and labor 
among its own global network of work centers. "The real question, if you're 
going to sign onto somebody for five to seven years, is do they have a vision 
for how they're going to move work around the network," says Kevin Campbell, 
group chief executive for outsourcing at Accenture (ACN). With more than 40 
centers, Accenture has the ability to shift work as market demands change 
(BusinessWeek, 4/23/07). 

Brazil is a Beneficiary  Indian providers, including Tata Consultancy Services 
(TCS), Wipro, and Infosys Technologies are trying to build similar global 
networks as well. TCS made the decision to move into Latin America about six 
years ago and now has 5,571 workers in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, 
Colombia, Ecuador, and Uruguay. TCS serves customers such as General Motors 
(GM), Goodyear (GT), and Motorola (MOT) from the region. 
  "Two-thirds of our customers use more than one location," says Gabriel 
Rozman, executive vice-president for emerging markets at TCS, adding that after 
the terror attacks of September 11, many U.S. companies realized the risk of 
outsourcing to only one location. Still, while the U.S. dollar has held fairly 
steady against the Mexican peso and Argentine peso in the past five years, it's 
dropped nearly 49% against the Brazilian real and nearly 39% against the 
Colombian peso. "We're not in great shape with [some] currencies in Latin 
America either," says Rozman. 
 The dollar's decline aside, even Brazilian firms are benefiting as companies 
spread their outsourcing around. "We're seeing increased demand, and it has 
been accelerating in the past three months," says Alvi Abuaf, president of 
North America for CPM Braxis. He says that the labor pool of IT workers is 
about 1 million in Brazil and growing at about 100,000 per year. Like Softtek, 
CPM Braxis positions itself as a complementary service to India. Adds Abuaf: 
"Latin America has been overlooked over the past two decades, but companies are 
realizing there is a viable alternative, and it's more viable today than it was 
before." 
 Already, Softtek is moving global delivery centers into smaller Mexican cities 
in an effort to avoid the competition for talent happening in places like 
Monterrey and Guadalajara. "The demand for talent is going to get bigger and 
bigger in the next five to eight years," says Lopez. 
  For more, see BusinessWeek's slide show. 
   King is a writer for BusinessWeek.com in San Francisco . 
 

       
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