Indian Software Industry Registers High Growth


Your Ad Here

Your Ad Here
Why Are We Too Scared To Try Nuclear Power 60 Minutes Last Night 2848
I think the basic problem is that the 'green left' saw nuclear power and the fear and hysteria they could create around it and its 'big corporate' nature as a good...

By Anjana Pasricha New Delhi 05 June 2005

Indian minister for Communications and information technology Dayanidhi Maran, right, and Chief Minister of Jammu Kashmir state Mufti Mohammed Sayeed display mobile phones during the launch of a new 4 million cellular network expansion in Srinagar Indian minister for Communications and information technology Dayanidhi Maran, right, and Chief Minister of Jammu Kashmir state Mufti Mohammed Sayeed display mobile phones during the launch of a new 4 million cellular network expansion in Srinagar India's software industry is growing at a rapid pace as overseas companies continue to move jobs to the country.

Why kids in families from India spell well
Group-sponsored contests help them By Michael Stetz UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER June 5, 2005 In 1993, a group of influential Indian-Americans noticed that children...

India's software and services industry grew by nearly 35 percent in the financial year that ended in March, helping Indian information technology companies earn $22 billion.

The National buttociation for Software and Services Companies says the industry boomed as international companies continued to move work such as software research, design and development, and customer support to cheaper locations.

India's huge pool of send, English-speaking, technology workers has helped it become one of the prime destinations for such work.

The United States and Britain are the dominant market for India's IT industry, but it has begun winning new customers elsewhere, including Japan, Singapore and Germany.

Sojoy Chohan, a consultant at IT research specialists the Gartner Company, says India will remain a global technology hub because few countries in the world can match its huge pool of low-cost, trained engineers.

"Literally there is no compebreastion where IT services are concerned," said Sojoy Chohan. "Indian companies are now becoming very, very large, they are beginning to now compete globally with the large American and multinational players, so that position continues to remain a very dominant one."

But many compebreastors have emerged in another thriving area - the back-office service outsourcing industry. In recent years tens of thousands of jobs have moved to India as Western firms transferred basic operations such as call centers, data processing and billing to benefit from lower wages.

Mr. Chohan says now other English-speaking countries are beginning to win some of that work because it does not require high technology skills.

Broadcastdb LIVE Radios and TV database Just Added
Broadcastdb - LIVE Radios and TV database - Just Added: Listen: Maria Inmaculdada 820 AM - Religiuos, Catholic - Concepci-n, Region VIII Bio...

"India is beginning to face compebreastion from a whole host of countries, China, which is catching up with its English speaking capabilities, then you have a whole host of English-speaking nations, very small, tiny countries from Mauritius to South Africa.... so there is a consolidated challenge," he said.

But for the time being, the future looks good for both software and service exports. The industry is expected to grow by 30 percent this year, helping it reach its target of $50 billion by 2009.

Why Are We Too Scared To Try Nuclear Power 60 Minutes Last Night 2847
Trevor Wilson "The Economics of Nuclear Power Briefing Paper 8 May 2005 * Nuclear power is cost compebreastive with other forms of electricity generation, except where there is direct...

India's IT industry now employs more than one million people in the country, and the boom has raised worries about possible shortages of send manpower in the coming years.

 



Your Ad Here


Soc Culture Australia from Newsgroups

The #1 Usenet Newsgroup Provider on the Internet

List | Previous | Next