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Sunday, January 13, 2008 : 1200 Hrs

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Rupee rally to cut IT salary gap in US, India by up to 21 pc

New Delhi (PTI): The adverse impact of rupee appreciation against the US dollar 
is well known for the IT sector, but the robust local currency is also narrowing
the gap in salaries of software professionals in US and India.

While the gap is likely to drop by up to 21 per cent in 2008 from the levels 
seen in 2006, it is still high enough to keep India's competitive edge as a
low-cost market, says a white paper by leading executive search firm Manpower.

According to data compiled by Manpower, the sector's staff level salaries were 
as much as 86 per cent higher in the US compared to India in 2006. However,
this gap declined to 82 per cent in 2007 and is expected to decline further to 
78 per cent in 2008.

In executive level salaries, the gap dropped from 68 per cent in 2006 to 60 per 
cent in 2007 and could further decline to 52 per cent this year.

However, the steepest decline of 21 per cent is likely to be seen in the middle 
manager level, where the US salaries used to be 69 per cent higher in 2006,
but would be only 48 per cent higher than India in 2008. This difference stood 
at 57 per cent in 2007.

While noting that salary is the biggest cost component, accounting for 45 per 
cent of IT companies and 40 per cent of BPO costs, the white paper said that
a close comparison of Indian and US salaries indicates a narrowing gap in cost 
arbitrage during 2006 to 2008.

Concerns have also been raised periodically that the adverse impact of rupee 
appreciation could force IT companies, for whom exports account for a major
part of revenues and profits, to cut down on the wage hikes and other employee 
costs in order to offset the impact on their margins.

However, "as long as the cost arbitrage exists and major companies remain 
profitable, the chances of a slowdown in recruitment may not be in the offing,"
the paper noted.

"While most of the companies have managed to weather the storm rather well, 
they have started to gear up for further appreciation in the rupee and taking
other remedial measures to increase productivity and improve efficiency in 
their operations instead of resorting to cost cutting around people," Manpower
said.

According to data compiled by Manpower, the average annual executive salaries 
in the US stood at 205,047 dollars in 2006 and increased to 213,336 dollars
in 2007. In comparison, the Indian average annual salary is expected to rise 
from 65,356 dollars to 103,167 dollars in 2008.

The estimates for 2008 are based on the assumption that salary levels remain 
unchanged in the US, while there would be an average 15 per cent increment
in the Indian salary, Manpower said. It took into account 2006 dollar rate at 
Rs 45, while for 2007 and 2008 it has considered rupee level at 40 and 38
respectively.

For middle-manager level, the US average annual salary actually dropped from 
104,681 dollars in 2006 to 103,379 dollars in 2007, while in India it rose
from 32,733 dollars in 2006 to 44,250 dollars in 2007 and would further improve 
to 53,566 dollars in 2008.

The Indian staff-level salary is expected to rise to 20,337 dollars in 2008, 
from 13,156 dollars in 2006 and 16,800 dollars in 2007. In the US, the 
staff-level
salary dropped from 92,201 dollars in 2006 to 91,965 dollars in 2007.

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