Nasscom ready to talk to unions on BPO layoffs: BPO Watch India

Page 1 of 1

Nasscom ready to talk to unions on BPO layoffs


November 13, 2008

Nasscom ready to talk to unions on BPO layoffs

The software industry is willing to talk to the sector's trade union on layoffs and other work-related issues, a top official of the industry's representative body said on Wednesday.

"If you want to talk to me why should I refuse simply because the colour of your shirt is red or green or whatever," Raju Bhatnagar, vice president for business process outsourcing (BPO) and government relations at Nasscom said.

Nasscom will be meeting the Union for Information and Technology-enabled Services (Unites) has enlisted the help of the Switzerland-based Union Network International.

"Yes, we will be meeting union officials but date is not confirmed," Bhatnagar said adding that it was incorrect to say that Nasscom has a fiat against IT professionals engaging in trade unionism because forming unions is a right enshrined in the Constitution.

Likening it to gagging people despite the right to the freedom of speech, Bhatnagar added: "How can we do that?" But while he said no meeting date has been finalised, Unites said the global union would meet Nasscom Dec 5.

"UNI general secretary Philip Jennings has deputed Philip Bowyer, deputy general secretary to visit India and he will be meeting Nasscom officials on Dec 5," Unites general secretary R. Karthik Shekhar said.

Unites is one of several Indian affiliates of UNI that is spread out across four regions - America, Africa, Asia-Pacific and Europe.

"The Geneva-based UNI represents 13 sectors, has 15 million members and is present in 130 countries," UNI's Development and Organisation Centre's Delhi office director Anjali Sinha said.

Asked about the extent of layoffs that have taken place in Indian IT and IT enabled services industry due to the global financial crisis, Shekhar said: "I can't give exact figures but it is about 5,000-6,000 workers."

Bhatnagar was sceptical about the figures trotted about. "The various figures being quoted in the media from 6,000 to 10,000 stretches the imagination because I know Goldman Sachs laid off 200-250 and Amex laid off about 100, beyond that I don't know and I would like to be educated about the other companies that have laid off thousands of people," he said.

He said although the financial crisis had impacted every sector, most companies have not muted their guidance.

"If guidance is an indicator then we cannot say that the IT-ITES industry is in so much trouble that it has to cut jobs in a big way," Bhatnagar said.

Page 1 of 1

Copyright 2008 India syndicate.com Pvt.Ltd. Advertise with us | Contact