Cross-Border Supply of IT Services WTO Cross-Border Supply Symposium
Transcription
Cross-Border Supply of IT Services WTO Cross-Border Supply Symposium
Cross-Border Supply of IT Services A Private Sector Perspective www.tcs.com WTO Cross-Border Supply Symposium Presentation by:- Ajoyendra Mukherjee 28 April 2005 • Geneva Vice President, TCS Agenda Indian IT Industry Cross-Border Service Delivery Opportunities – As Supplier & Consumer Challenges Conclusion Indian IT Industry Services Spectrum Application Development & Maintenance IT Enabled Services IT Infrastructure Management Engineering, R&D Indian IT Industry 30000 28200 US $ Million 25000 21500 20000 16100 15000 13400 12100 10000 8200 5000 0 99-00 00-01 Includes IT Services & Software, ITES-BPO and Hardware 01 - 02 02- 03 03- 04 04-05E Source: NASSCOM, Strategic Review 2005 20000 Indian IT Industry - Exports 17900 US $ Million 18000 16000 14000 13300 12000 9900 10000 7600 8000 6200 6000 4000 4000 2000 0 99-00 00-01 Includes IT Services & Software, ITES-BPO and Hardware 01 - 02 02- 03 03- 04 04-05E Source: NASSCOM, Strategic Review 2005 Indian IT Export Destinations Americas 69.4% Others 4.4% Africa 0.6% Japan 3.0% Excludes hardware exports Europe 22.6% Source: NASSCOM, Strategic Review 2004 Cross Border Service Providers 17.2 12.8 India - the largest “Cross-border” IT Services Provider 4.7 1.9 India Canada China 1.8 Eastern Europe 0.9 0.5 Philippines Mexico Others Estimated Value of Offshore Sourcing (US $ M) – CY 2004 Source: neoIT, NASSCOM TCS – Largest Indian IT Service Provider Created Indian IT Industry and have led it since 1968 Revenue (US $ M) 2005 2240 2004 33 Delivery Centers - 15 in India, 18 Overseas 1560 2002 Growing at a rate of > 40% annually 880 2000 489 1998 Global Employee Strength of 43000+ 291 0 500 Operate in 47 countries 1000 1500 2000 2500 60% Revenue from North America, 23% from Europe Enterprise wide CMMi, PCMM L5 Agenda Indian IT Industry Cross-Border Service Delivery Opportunities – As Supplier & Consumer Challenges Conclusion Cross-Border Service Delivery – Genesis Client Office, Onsite Small, dedicated team stationed at client site • Development • Maintenance • Testing Support TCS Office, India 1970s “Movement of Natural Persons” Cross-Border Service Delivery – Genesis Office Setup in the same country as client Client Office, Onsite • Sales & Marketing • Account management TCS Office “Commercial Presence” 1980s TCS Office, India “Movement of Natural Persons” Cross-Border Service Delivery – Genesis Client Office, Onsite “Cross Border Supply” Remote Service Delivery (Offshore) TCS Office • Design & Coding • Testing • Documentation • Maintenance “Commercial Presence” 1990s TCS Office, India “Movement of Natural Persons” Cross-Border Service Delivery – Genesis Delivery Centers across the globe to establish a near-shore presence Client Office, Onsite Multi “Cross Border Supply” TCS Office TCS GDC Local Recruits “Commercial Presence” 2000+ TCS Office, India “Movement of Natural Persons” Cross-Border Service Delivery – Summary “Cross Border Supply” “Consumption Abroad” Offshore Delivery Centers established in India to service overseas customers remotely with a costeffective, scalable model People sent overseas for specialized Training “Commercial Presence” “Movement of natural persons” Global Delivery Centers setup to address regulatory & language requirements, 24x7 service delivery windows, BCP & DR Dedicated team stationed at client site & People moving between Vendor offices in different Countries Agenda Indian IT Industry Cross-Border Service Delivery Opportunities – As Supplier & Consumer Challenges Conclusion Opportunities – As Consumer Cost Saving High Quality Faster Time to Market 24 Hour Service Window Better Utilization of Internal Workforce Address Aging Demographics of Western economies Opportunities – As Supplier Potential for Indian IT Industry by 2008 Category $ Billion IT Services Exports ITES Exports 28-30 21-24 Product and Technology Services Domestic Market 8-11 13-15 Total 70-80 • By 2008, IT and ITES Services will generate an employment for 1.1 M and 1 M respectively • In addition the Parallel Support Services will create employment for another 2 M people Source: NASSCOM, McKinsey Report, 2002 Agenda Indian IT Industry Cross-Border Service Delivery Opportunities – As Supplier & Consumer Challenges Conclusion Challenges – “Movement of Natural Persons” Immigration & Visa Issues Universal Recognition of Qualifications, Experience and Training Employment laws enforcing local hiring directly or indirectly e.g. USA (recruitment attestation / displacement attestation), UK (TUPE) Wage Parity Insisted upon Social Security Tax Tax Withholding Challenges – “Commercial Presence” Structure of Entity (Branch, JV, Fully owned Subsidiary etc.) Restrictions on Foreign Investments & Local equity participations Remittance of foreign exchange Staffing & Management conditions Restricted Access to certain market segments based on the structure Challenges – “Cross-Border Supply” Data Security / Data Protection IP Protection & Software Piracy Language & Cultural Differences Deduction of Withholding Tax Double Taxation Geo-political Stability & Government support Offshore Management Agenda Indian IT Industry Cross-Border Service Delivery Opportunities – As Supplier & Consumer Challenges Conclusion Conclusion Cross-Border IT Services is a growing necessity and opportunity Visa & Immigration, Taxation, Protectionist Law and Uniformity in Qualification are some of the key challenges still faced by a service provider like us… A uniform GATS framework and commitment will provide the right impetus to the growth of Cross-Border IT Services