The
refrain was tiresomely extraordinary. In its recently released results
on the performance of India's software and IT-enabled services sector
during 2004-05, the National Association of Software and Services Companies
(NASSCOM) declared that the sector had once again notched up a record
of sorts. Its revenues had grown by 32 per cent over the previous year,
the highest rate since the slowdown of 2001, surpassing the agency's own
25 per cent projection. Once again, exports were principally responsible
for this dynamism, having grown by 34 per cent. And domestic revenues
of the industry, though lagging behind, also grew at an impressive 23
per cent.
In absolute terms too the size of the software and IT-enabled services
sector is now impressive. NASSCOM estimates the size of the industry at
$22 billion, comprising of 4.8 billion of domestic revenues, $12 billion
of software and services export revenues and $5.2 billion of revenues
from exports of IT-enabled services and business process outsourcing (BPO).
Thus, even when the hardware segment of the IT industry is excluded, gross
revenues from IT services have come to account for as much as 3.3 per
cent of GDP. Needless to say, gross revenues tend to be higher than the
value added (or the excess of revenue over purchases of raw materials,
intermediates and power and fuel) in an industry, which determines its
contribution to GDP. However, based on a sample of 209 software companies
included in the CMIE's Prowess database, it has been estimated that value
added in 2002-03 amounted to as much as 92 per cent in this industry,
making gross revenues a close approximation of value added in the services
sector.
By way of comparison, the gross revenues from IT services was in 2004-05
about 20 per cent higher than the GDP generated in India's construction
sector and almost three times as much as the GDP in mining and in electricity,
gas and water supply. What is more, gross revenues from IT services exceeded
12 per cent of GDP generated in India's services sector as a whole, which
accounts for more than 50 per cent of the nation's GDP. Thus, even though
the software and IT-enabled services sector started from a small or negligible
base a decade back, its rapid expansion at an annual compound rate of
more than 30 per cent per annum between 1998-99 and 200405 has ensured
that it is today an important presence in the economy.
There are two aspects to the rise to maturity of this sector that are
well recognised now. First, it has been driven predominantly by external
demand. Exports of software and IT-enabled services have risen at a compound
annual rate of 38 per cent a year since 1997-98, and overwhelmingly explain
the rapid rise of the sector. Second, within exports, in recent years
IT-enabled services have emerged the dynamic segment, growing at an amazingly
high annual compound rate of 56 per cent per annum when IT software and
services exports were growing at less than half that rate.
Given the importance of exports in explaining the sector's growth rate,
it is not surprising that its rise to dominance has substantially increased
its contribution to India's foreign exchange earnings. According to Reserve
Bank of India estimates, net invisible earnings from exports of software
(and IT-enabled) services rose from $5.8 billion in 2000-01 to $11.8 billion
in 2003-04 and $12.2 billion during the first nine months of 2004-05 (April-December).
If that trend had persisted during the rest of last year, net earnings
from software services exports would have amounted to $17.1 billion in
2004-05, which is a number that tallies with NASSCOM's software and IT
services exports figure.
This has made IT services exports an important component of India's total
(merchandise and non-merchandise) exports. The ratio of IT services to
merchandise exports has risen from 13 per cent in 2000-01 to an estimated
20 per cent in 2004-05. Further, the ratio of net II services export earnings
to total net invisible earnings rose from 53 to 59 per cent between those
two years.
It is well known that private transfers or remittances from Indian residents
abroad together with revenues from IT have helped India notch up a current
account surplus during the three years 2001-02 to 2003-04. While remittances
are the result of the short-term migration of natural persons, IT services
earnings are the result of a process of digital migration facilitated
by the technology that allows for the cross-border supply from remote
locations of a range of services, often in real time. Thus the provision
of labour services through actual or digital migration have substantially
strengthened India's balance of payments. Even during 2004-05, despite
the sharp increases in oil prices and India's non-oil import bill, the
deficit on the current account has been held down because of flows on
account of these forms of migration.
Initially remittances were far more important than software services earnings.
But partly because of a slowing of remittance inflows in 2004-05, it is
estimated that the ratio of software services earnings to remittance inflows
has risen from 45 per cent in 2000-01 to 60 per cent in 2002-03 and 83
per cent in 2004-05. This makes the role of the IT sector in shoring up
the current account of India's balance of payments quite crucial.
Finally, the software and IT-enabled services sector is becoming a major
source of employment at the margin. The only available estimates here
are those from NASSCOM, which indicate that employment rose from around
285,000 in 1999-2000 to just above one million in 2004-05, or at a compound
rate of about 28.5 per cent per annum. This is indeed remarkable given
the fact that rate of growth of employment during the second half of the
1990s (1993-94 to 1999-2000) as per NSS statistics amounted to just 0.67
per cent in rural areas and 1.34 per cent in urban areas. Further, since
aggregate revenues from software and IT-enabled services grew at the same
pace over that period, it appears that for every one percentage point
growth in output, employment in the sector also rose by a percentage point.
Thus the phenomenon of jobless growth does not appear to be true of this
sector at all.
In sum, the current and evolving role of software and IT-enabled services
in India's economy is indeed substantial. The sector is proving to be
a major growth pole within the services sector, which in turn drives GDP
growth in the country. Not surprisingly, there is much concern as to whether
the sector can sustain a high, even if not the dramatic, growth rate;
whether that growth would continue to support India's balance of payments;
and whether the benefits of this growth would spill over onto the rest
of the economy.
The answers to all these questions would depend on how we interpret the
structural characteristics of growth in the IT sector. There are a number
of such characteristics which need to be flagged. The first is that while
the external market is the prime driver of growth in this sector, that
market is dominated by one country: the US. This makes the industry vulnerable.
Any slow down in the US can have a dramatic impact on the fortunes of
the industry.
Second, India today dominates the global market for outsourced software
and IT-enabled services. NASCCOM quotes an estimate according to which
India today accounts for 44 per cent of the global outsourcing market.
This ratio goes up to 55 per cent if only the ITeS-BPO segment is considered.
If current growth rates are to persist either the global market would
have to grow at that rate with a stable Indian share or the industry would
have to increase its share of the global market over time. That is indeed
a touch difficult.
Third, since the ITeS-BPO sector accounts for a rising share of total
revenues, India's dependence on the less skill-intensive segments of the
software and IT-services sector is rising. This makes it even more difficult
to maintain market shares, especially without a substantial drop in revenues
per employee, since competitors are more easily generated.
Finally, even if India's share of outsourcing revenues remains high, the
net benefits of this are still unclear because of the dominance of a few
firms and a substantial share for captive offshore outsourcing by international
firms in the ITeS-BPO sector. According to NASSCOM figures, in 2003-04
the top 20 software and IT services exporters accounted for as much as
61 per cent of total export revenues. And captive ITeS-BPO providers accounted
for as much as 65 per cent of the value of ITeS contracts outsourced to
India. This kind of concentration not only makes the linkage effects of
the growth of the industry less significant, it also has adverse implication
for the net foreign exchange earning of the sector after taking into account
repatriation of profits and other payments abroad.
Finally, the absolute employment contribution of the software and IT services
sector makes its position within the Indian economy that of an enclave.
Even at just over a million, the number of worker in software and IT services
amount to just one quarter of one per cent of all workers in India as
per the 2001 Census, or one-third of one per cent of all main workers
in 2001 or two-thirds of one per cent of all workers outside agriculture
and household industry. This suggests that a sector whose presence in
terms of its contribution to GDP and its contribution to India's currently
comfortable balance of payments position is indeed substantial, cannot
make much of a direct difference to a substantial section of India's population.
Hence an excessive dependence on this sector for growth at the margin
may be inequalising, unless players in the industry make a substantial
contribution to the State's tax revenues that can sustain expenditures
on employment generation and social provision.
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