The government said IT industry has
assured it that there will be no large-scale job losses in the technology
sector which continues to demonstrate 8-9 per cent growth.
IT
Secretary Aruna Sundararajan said there could be some cases were contracts are
not renewed as part of the regular annual appraisal cycle.
Besides,
she said, the industry is also undergoing a shift in the job profile given the
advent of cloud, big data and digital payments.
“Some
of the companies which have been named (as undertaking job cuts) have clarified
that there is nothing big this year,” she said on the sidelines of Broadband
India Forum event.
Sundararajan
added: “As part of annual appraisals, they may not be renewing contract of some
people but it is absolutely incorrect to assume that suddenly this year a large
number of jobs are being shed.”
The
government has categoric assurance from the industry in this regard, she
emphasised.
The
industry is growing at 8-9 per cent and there is nothing to suggest that the
growth is going to slow down “dramatically“.
IT
sector, she said, will continue to hire and has added 5 lakh jobs in the last
2.5 years. The issue needed to be looked at “holistically”, she added.
Over
the past few weeks, there have been reports of layoffs across the IT sector.
Tech majors like Wipro, Infosys, Cognizant, and, more recently, Tech Mahindra
have initiated annual performance reviews, a process that weeds out bottom
performers or non-performers.
There
are fears that thousands of employees in the sector could be shown the door
over the next few weeks.
The
development comes at a time when Indian IT firms are facing challenges in the
business environment and stricter work permit regime in countries like the US,
Singapore, Australia and New Zealand.
That
apart, executive search firm Head Hunters India said recently that job cuts in
IT sector will be between 1.75 lakh and 2 lakh annually for next three years
due to under-preparedness in adapting to newer technologies.
A
McKinsey & Company report also said earlier this year that nearly half of
the workforce in the IT services firms will be “irrelevant” over the next 3-4
years.
Agencies
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