Akibat melonjaknya kegiatan ekonomi di Bangalore,
kamar hotel setanding di Mumbai berharga $ 115/malam,
di Bangalore sampai $ 300/malam.

Salam,  
RM



(CyberTimes)   
 
   
Bustling B'lore buckling with jobs 
 
Cheap-but-skilled manpower in abundance continue to
attract companies world over to the 'Garden City',
ignoring the infrastructure bottlenecks. 
 
Monday, October 18, 2004 

 
Narayanan Madhavan 

BANGALORE: When narrow colonial-era streets get jammed
with evening traffic in India's technology capital,
the radio disc jockey on car stereos turns agony aunt.


"I want you to vent all your frustrations by screaming
as hard as you want to," Darius Sunawala tells a
rush-hour commuter moaning by phone about potholed
roads in Bangalore. 

The break-neck growth in jobs and income in this south
Indian boomtown has proved a mixed blessing. Traffic
is just one problem linked to its dash to relative
prosperity, along with drastic changes to lifestyles
for those working interminable night shifts and
worries about the moral health of all the well-paid
youngsters. 

Of course, any indication that Bangalore's growth has
limits would be welcomed by many workers in Western
countries, particularly the United States, where
outsourcing has been a hot issue in the presidential
campaign ahead of the November 2nd, election. 

But experts say traffic jams will not deter the more
than 1,200 companies who have decided to set up shop
here, simply because of the huge pool of cheap talent.
Plus, telecoms and power facilities matter more to
them than roads or culture. 

Santosh Martin, associate director at real estate
consultants Jones Lang LaSalle, said companies will
look to lease 8 million square feet (743,000 sq
metres) of new office space in Bangalore this year --
implying roughly 80,000 new jobs -- up from nearly 6
million a year ago. 

"This is not supply, but demand," Martin said. 

"Clients have always been complaining about
infrastructure, but that has not stopped them from
coming." 

India's huge cheap-but-skilled workforce with fluent
English has attracted companies from around the world.
They have created around 550,000 jobs in software and
280,000 in back-office work in a $12.5 billion
industry growing at 30 percent a year. 

No less than a third of those workers are in
Bangalore. And as a result of all the growth, plush
restaurants have popped up beside the potholed roads
and property prices have shot up, especially for
trendy condominiums. 

Steel-and-glass offices and apartments are mushrooming
in shiny new suburbs outside the city of 6.5 million
once known as "Pensioner's Paradise". 

CLOGGED STREETS 

The sound of impatient commuters honking fills the air
and once-sleepy streets are now clogged. Fuelled by
cheap car loans, Bangalore has added 370,000 vehicles
in two years, taking the number to 1.95 million. 

A clutch of tech companies have threatened to boycott
the annual BangaloreIT.com industry show from November
1st to 5th if the authorities fail to act to tackle
traffic jams and potholes. 

Officials say they are doing their best, pointing to a
9-km (5.5-mile) elevated expressway announced last
month to link central Bangalore with its Electronics
City suburb and saying they could take further
measures if necessary. 

All the new jobs have put more money in the pockets of
Bangaloreans, even if they struggle to find the time
to enjoy it. 

Anil Kumar, a 27-year-old Hindu, and Imelda Fernando,
his 26-year-old Christian fiancee, are the faces of a
new, cosmopolitan India who make a good living in the
middle of the night, serving U.S. customers many time
zones away. 

Both work for TransWorks, a 2,600-employee call centre
firm, where they regularly do 12-hour shifts that end
well after dawn. 

FIVE-STAR EATERIES 

On days off, they eat at five-star hotels, something
their parents, modest government workers, could hardly
dream of. 

"And we take taxis, which our parents never could,"
Fernando said. 

Between them, the couple has had eight promotions in
four years and their salaries have grown roughly
five-fold. 

Imelda started as an agent, but now manages 125 people
and earns 33,000 rupees a month. Kumar, an assistant
general manager, earns twice that. While their pay is
a third or less of what U.S. counterparts earn, it is
more than enough in India. 

But for couples on the opposite ends of night shifts,
being together is tough, Kumar said. "Your life can go
for a toss." 

And that's not to mention the traffic. 

"It takes me 40 minutes to get to work," Fernando
said. "Earlier it was 20." 

In a country of one billion people, where two-thirds
of them depend on agriculture, making big sacrifices
for work is common. 

Nonetheless, turnover in the outsourcing industry is
high, so recruiters flock to find new talent at "job
fairs" and managers offer staff loans, discount pizzas
and cheap accommodation. 

Local newspapers speak of a threat to conservative
Indian values as young workers increasingly indulge in
casual sex, and the papers suggest that eager human
resource managers may be encouraging too much staff
bonding in an effort to boost morale. 

As for the notion that Bangaloreans are stealing jobs,
that rarely enters the debate. 

"Most companies are outsourcing growth," said Kumar,
who also speaks proudly about how his employees helped
a U.S. client keep business going when hurricanes
hammered Florida a few weeks ago.




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