Once the middle class's dream, the IT sector is now beset with layoffs and job problems. Will it see light at the end of the tunnel?
In the introduction to Kris Gopalakrishnan’s Against All Odds: The IT Story of India, author Gurcharan Das wrote: “The quiet economic and social revolution unleashed by IT is the cheeriest story of India’s recent economic ascent...†In the same book, Infosys Founder NR Narayana Murthy is quoted saying that along with investing adequately in research and development, improving work productivity, and enhancing innovation capabilities, “our job is to attract the best and the brightestâ€. Industry body Nasscom says the Indian IT industry directly employed 5.1 million people in FY22, and generated $226 billion in revenue.
IT services has been the Indian middle class’s dream since the early ’90s. However, the recent turn of events represents another story. These diary entries (see below) of tech workers represent the predicament the sector is going through.
Hiring in the IT sector has dropped by 25 percent versus last year, as per the Naukri JobSpeak Report (January 2023). India’s top four IT companies saw a net addition of just 1,940 employees in Q3, the lowest in the last eight quarters. Most of these companies have been delaying onboarding of new employees, some have reportedly offered close to 50 percent salary cuts in exchange for immediate placement. Active job volumes in the tech sector have dropped by nearly 50 percent on a year-on-year basis, according to staffing firm Xpheno. Â
There has been a flood of news reports about layoffs: Accenture plans to cut 19,000 jobs; Indeed to lay off 2,200 (15 percent) employees; Amazon said it will layoff 9,000 people, in its second round of job cuts; GitHub has laid off its entire engineering team in India (over 100 jobs); Disney announced three rounds of layoffs, that could affect about 7,000 employees. Indian startups have already laid off close to 5,000 people in 2023, as per Layoffs.fyi, and the next few months will see many more.Â
Experts believe this should be taken as a cyclical movement. However, for tech workers and students looking for jobs in the sector, it is a nightmare.
(This story appears in the 21 April, 2023 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)