ЁЯЩПЁЯЩПЁЯЩПЁЯЩПЁЯЩПITтАЩs the global slowdown effect – The Hindu BusinessLine

Clipped from: https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/its-the-global-slowdown-effect/article66778539.ece

Top tech firms have been hit and are cutting down on hiring, which is rubbing off on a host of other service providers as well

Bengaluru isnтАЩt called the back-office of the world for nothing. ItтАЩs reckoned that around 1.5 million people in the city work in the IT/ITeS sector тАФ out of a population of around 13 million. Add to that a range of service providers like the people who provide cabs and run the office canteens.

Bengaluru may be the back-office of the world but other Indian cities arenтАЩt very different. Hop to Hyderabad, a rapidly growing city of 10.8 million. Here itтАЩs estimated 778,000 people are directly involved in the tech sector. Totally, across India the tech sector employs about 5.5 million people.

So when thereтАЩs a global tech slowdown, itтАЩs got a huge impact, especially on a city like Bengaluru. Everyone from software services giants like Infosys and Wipro to the cityтАЩs host of start-ups has been hit by the downturn.

Barely a year ago, the software-service industry was in a bullish mood about all the new possibilities opening up with AI and the cloud. It looked like even with Covid-19, the industry could only keep growing at a greater pace than ever before.

Now, though, the global slowdown has hit the industry. Even top firms like TCS and Infosys have clients hoarding cash in case of harder times ahead. As a result, InfosysтАЩ share price has tumbled from a peak of тВ╣1,657 last December to тВ╣1,228 on April 24. The company in December had 81.7 per cent of its workers on projects and the remaining were тАЬbenchedтАЩ or waiting for assignments.

TCS has slammed down the brakes on recruitment. The company hired around a lakh new people in financial year 2022 but that fell over the next 12 months to barely 22,600. Infosys has much the same story: hiring is down from 54,000 in FY22 to 29,219 in the financial year just ended.

Turn to IndiaтАЩs vibrant start-up sector which has inevitably been hit by the global slowdown and the prevailing uncertainty. There hasnтАЩt been a single new unicorn in 2023. In the first three months of 2022, there were already 13 freshly minted start-ups proudly proclaiming their unicorn status.

The repercussions of the software-services slowdown will be felt all over urban India. In the real-estate sector for instance, Colliers says co-working companies picked up 2.1 million sq ft during Q1, 2023 тАФ that was 20 per cent of total office space. The technology sector, which has always had a huge office-space appetite because it hires in such large numbers, was only slightly ahead at 22 per cent.

This change in real estate demand is a combination of factors. At one level, companies still arenтАЩt clear how the work world will unfold in coming years. Will we start trickling back to our mega-offices now that Covid is over or will most companies adopt permanent flexible work patterns?

Co-working spaces

As a result of this uncertainty, even software-services firms are picking up co-working spaces instead of leasing themselves. At another level, obviously the hiring slowdown means theyтАЩll need less office space right now. Colliers says large technology occupiers have also been leasing тАЬflex spacesтАЭ because of тАЬflexible lease terms, lower capex and modern workplace designтАЭ combined with тАЬongoing recessionary concernsтАЭ and tech-sector layoffs.

It wonтАЩt only be the real estate sector that will take a beating if the tech sector loses steam. Increased hiring and pay hikes mean more liberal spending all round the city and the reverse is also true. тАЬMany companies havenтАЩt been able to place freshers they recruited last year. This year the recruitment outlook for freshers is grim,тАЭ says Pareekh Jain, CEO, Pareekh Consulting.

Nevertheless, Jain insists the future for the Indian infotech sector isnтАЩt as bleak as it might now appear. Firstly, the slowdown doesnтАЩt seem to be as bad as it some had expected. ItтАЩs come down from double-digit growth for most companies to mid-single-digits (analysts were mostly hoping for high single-digit growth). Also, Indian companies have prepared for the future by building strength in upcoming sectors like AI and the cloud.

A large chunk of the software services industryтАЩs business continues to come from the US and the UK. But Indian firms are still getting a larger chunk of the business even in markets where itтАЩs got a strong base because itтАЩs able to offer price advantages and itтАЩs also aggressively moved into the new upcoming sectors. For now, though, itтАЩs going to be wary belt-tightening all round as firms wait to see how the next months play out.

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