Last June, the IT industry body had predicted that the USD 143-billion domestic software industry might hire 2.75 lakh in 2016-17, up from about 2.3 lakh during last fiscal.
According to Nasscom chairman C P Gurnani, who is also the chief executive of TechMahindra, the drop in recruitment would not impact the revenue growth which is pegged at 10-11 per cent in the current financial year.
"I think we are still maintaining that overall industry will grow at 10-11 per cent this year... The hiring will not be as linier as we have seen in the past. The digital world leads to automation, automation leads to relatively lesser recruitments. Secondly, digital also means to get closer to the customer.
A recent report by Mumbai-based Centrum Broking had said that the big five software exporters - TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL and Cognizant - together added net 24 per cent fewer employees in 2015 at 77,265, thanks to their automation drive.
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The massive plunge in net additions was led by the Chennai-based Cognizant (down 74.6 per cent from 2014) and HCL (down 71 per cent) which have been very keenly focusing on improving utilisation rates through automation, Centrum said.
During the fourth quarter, TCS had added only 22,576 to
take its total workforce to over 3.53 lakh, but chief executive N Chandrasekaran said the gross hiring in this fiscal will be "much lower" than 90,000 in 2015-16 on lowering attrition, better productivity and deepening automation drive.
TCS expects up to 32,000 freshers to join its benches from the 45,000 offers made at campuses across the country.
Infosys had said last week that in the March quarter, its total headcount stood at 1,94,044, up from 1,76,187 a year ago. Net additions in the quarter stood at 661 people. But the company did not reveal its hiring plans.
"If I look at my member companies, and our global innovation centres, very few of them are from West Asia, while about 60 per cent of our revenue comes from America, and 25 per cent from Europe. So I think the impact will be minimal," Gurnani said.
On the impact of US elections outcome, Gurnani said some of the US senators should answer if they need India more or India needs US more.