As a relatively poor country, India is not normally thought off as a nation capable of building a major presence in a high technology industry, such as computer software.
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International Trade
THE RISE OF THE INDIAN SOFTWARE
INDUSTRY (20Marks)
As a relatively poor country, India is not
normally thought off as a nation capable of building a major presence in a high
technology industry, such as computer software. In little over a decade,
however, the Indian software industry has astounded its skeptics and emerged
from obscurity to become an important force in the global software industry.
Between 1991 – 92 and 2001 – 02, sales of Indian software companies grew at a
compound rate in excess of 50 percent annually. In 1991 – 92, the industry had
sales totaling $388 million. By 2002 they were around $8 billion. By the early
2000s, more than 900 software companies in India employed 200,000 software
engineers, the third largest concentration of such talent in the world. Much of
this growth was powered by exports. In 1985, Indian software exports were worth
less than $10 million. They surged to $1.8 billion in 1997 and hit a record
$6.2 billion in 2002, with some two-thirds of those exports going to the United
States. The future looks very bright. Powered by continued export – led growth,
India’s National Association of Software and Service Companies projects that
total software revenues generated by Indian companies will hit $21 billion by
2008. As a testament to this growth, many foreign software companies are now
investing heavily Microsoft, IBM Oracle, and Computer Associates, the four
largest U.S. based software houses. Equally significantly, two out of every
five global company new source their software service from India. Most of the
current growth of the Indian software industry has been based on contract or
project based work for foreign clients. Many Indian companies, for example,
maintain applications for their clients, convert code, or migrate software from
one platform to another. Increasingly, Indian companies are also involved in
important development projects for foreign clients. For example, TCS, India’s
largest software company, has an alliance with Ernst & Young under which
TCS will develop and maintain customized software for Ernst & Young’s
global clients. TCS also has a development alliance with Microsoft under which
the company developed a paperless national share depository system for the Indian
stock market based on Microsoft’s Windows operating system and SQL Server
database technology. Indian companies are also moving aggressively into
e-commerce projects. From almost zero in 1997,e – commerce or e-business
projects now account for about 10 percent of all software development and
service work in India and are projected to reach 20 percent within two years.
The Indian software industry has emerged despite a poor information technology
infrastructure. In 2000, India had just five personal computers per 1,000
people, compared to 588 per 1,000 in the United States, 32 telephone lines per
1,000 people compared to 700 per 1,000 in the United States, and Internet users
numbered around 5 million, compared to almost 100 million in the United States.
But sales of personal computers are starting to take off, and the rapid growth
of mobile telephones in India’s main cities is to some extent compensating for
the lack of fixed telephone lines. In explaining the success of their industry,
India’s software entrepreneurs point to a number of factors. Although the
general level of education in India is low, India’s important middle class is
highly educated and its top educational institutions are world class. Also,
India has always emphasized engineering. Another great plus from an
international perceptive is that English is the working language throughout
much of middle – class India – a remnant from the days of the British raja.
Then there is the wage rate. American software engineers are increasingly
scarce, and the basic salary has been driven up to one of the highest for any
occupational group in the country, with programmers earning $90,000 per year. Programmers
in India, in contrast, earn about $5,800 per year, which is very low by
international standards but high by Indian standards. Salaries for programmers
are rising rapidly in India, but so is productivity. In 1992, productivity was
around $21,000 per software engineer. By 2000, the figure had risen to $65,000.
As a consequence of these factors, of these factors, in 2002 work done in India
for U.S. software companies amounted to $25 to $35 an hour, compared to $75 to
$100 per hour for software development done in the United States. Another
factor helping India is that satellite communications have removed distance as
an obstacle to doing business for foreign clients. Because software is nothing
more than a stream of zeroz and ones, it can be transported at the speed of
light and negligible cost to any point in the world. In a world of instant
communication, India’s geographical position between Europe and United States
has given it a time zone advantage. Indian companies have been able to exploit
the rapidly expanding international market for outsourced software services,
including the expanding market for remote maintenance. Indian engineers can fix
software bugs, upgrade systems, or process data overnight while their users in
Western companies are asleep. To maintain their competitive position, Indian
software companies are now investing heavily in training and leading-edge
programming skills. They have also been enthusiastic adopters of international
quality standards, particularly ISO 9000 certification. Indian companies are
also starting to make forays into the application and shrink-wrapped software
business, primarily with applications aimed at the domestic market. It may only
be a matter of time, however, before Indian companies to compete head to head
with companies such as Microsoft, Oracle, People Soft and SAP in the
applications business.
Answer
the following question.
Q1.
To what extent does the theory of comparative advantage explain the rise of the
Indian software industry?
Q2.
To what extent does the Heckscher – Ohlin theory explain the rise of the Indian
software industry?
Q3.
Use Michael Porter’s diamond to analyze the rise of the Indian software
industry. Does this analysis help explain the rise of this industry?
Q4. Which
of the above theories – comparative advantage, Heckscher – Ohlin, or Porter’s
gives the best explanation of the rise of the Indian software industry ? Why?
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