Spending on information technology projects farmed out to low-cost places such as India should grow by 1 percent this year, according to a report on Thursday from investment firm Merrill Lynch.
The report, based on a December survey of 50 US-based chief information officers, also found that spending on offshore IT services represents a small but growing chunk of budgets allocated to IT services. In 2004, offshore IT services accounted for 1 percent of the budgets, but CIOs indicated that that figure will increase to 1.4 percent in coming years.
"We expect US companies to increase jobs sent offshore in the next two to three years as they try to drive costs down and improve operating margins," the report said.
Merrill's survey is the latest data point in an as-yet-incomplete picture about the scope and effect of so-called offshore outsourcing. Comprehensive data about the controversial trend has been lacking, but a $2m government study is in the works.
Business leaders have defended shipping work abroad as ultimately good for the US economy and its workers. Critics claim that the practice eliminates well-paying jobs and threatens the nation's long-term technological leadership.
The Merrill Lynch survey suggests that tech workers should not fret much about job cuts in the short run. Asked about their near-term IT staff-hiring picture, 14 percent of respondents indicated that they are actively hiring, 34 percent answered they are selectively hiring, and 46 percent do not see a change in their internal staff. Six percent indicated that they are selectively cutting back positions.
"After several quarters of building up internal staff, we believe hiring by user organisations has hit capacity and will not change much for the rest of the year," Merrill Lynch said.






Talkback
Sir,
India could develop in offshoring but the parent companies must show the interest on the interested consultant who can work seriously to enhance the organizational growth as well as individual growth.
Me Sunil from Andhra Pradesh, a software consultant, Lax Company, apalogize for being pasting my information in a comment window, that i am working for a consultant of which converting the .pdf data to .doc files. Seriously i am trying to get a genuine contract since 2 years on a direct parent company basis, but couldn't reach the point so far. I am working for a consultant but never use to get prompt billing from my consultant side. Believe me i can show my work by sending the sample files. Trust me i can put all my effort for those who can trust for assigning me the contract.
Expertize in Data Conversion Projects.
sunil
Andhra Pradesh
India.
Sir,
India could develop in offshoring but the parent companies must show the interest on the interested consultant who can work seriously to enhance the organizational growth as well as individual growth.
Me Sunil from Andhra Pradesh, a software consultant, Lax Company, apalogize for being pasting my information in a comment window, that i am working for a consultant of which converting the .pdf data to .doc files. Seriously i am trying to get a genuine contract since 2 years on a direct parent company basis, but couldn't reach the point so far. I am working for a consultant but never use to get prompt billing from my consultant side. Believe me i can show my work by sending the sample files. Trust me i can put all my effort for those who can trust for assigning me the contract.
Expertize in Data Conversion Projects.
sunil
Andhra Pradesh
India.