China is not the only booming economy with reports of skill shortages. A piece in today's New York Times by Somini Sengupta, Skills Gap Hurts Technology Boom in India, reports a shortage of engineers - and the scarmble to educate more:
As its technology companies soar to the outsourcing skies, India is
bumping up against an improbable challenge. In a country once regarded
as a bottomless well of low-cost, ready-to-work, English-speaking
engineers, a shortage looms.
India still produces plenty of engineers, nearly 400,000 a year at last count. But their competence has become the issue.
A study commissioned by a trade group, the National Association of
Software and Service Companies, or Nasscom, found only one in four
engineering graduates to be employable. The rest were deficient in the
required technical skills, fluency in English or ability to work in a
team or deliver basic oral presentations.
The skills gap reflects the narrow availability of high-quality
college education in India and the galloping pace of the country’s
service-driven economy, which is growing faster than nearly all but
China’s. The software and service companies provide technology services
to foreign companies, many of them based in the United States. Software
exports alone expanded by 33 percent in the last year.
The university systems of few countries would be able to keep up
with such demand, and India is certainly having trouble. The best and
most selective universities generate too few graduates, and new private
colleges are producing graduates of uneven quality.
Many fear that the labor pinch may signal bottlenecks in other parts
of the economy. It is already being felt in the information technology
sector. With the number of technology jobs expected to nearly double to 1.7
million in the next four years, companies are scrambling to find fresh
engineering talent and to upgrade the schools that produce it.
Some companies are training faculty members themselves, offering
courses tailored to industry needs and improving college labs and
libraries. They are rushing to get first choice of would-be engineers
long before they have completed their course work. And they are fanning
out to small, remote colleges that almost no one had heard of before.
The country’s most successful technology concerns can no longer afford
to hire only from the most prestigious Indian universities. Nor can
they expect recent graduates to be ready to hit the shop floor. Most
companies require in-house training of anywhere from two to six months.
Demand is beginning to be felt on the bottom line. Entry-level
salaries in the software industry have risen by an average of 10 to 15
percent in recent years. And Nasscom, which helps companies wanting to
outsource find workers, forecasts a shortage of 500,000 professional
employees in the technology sector by 2010.
The labor crunch is starting to pop up across the service economy.
ICICI, the country’s largest financial services company, announced
plans to hire up to 40,000 workers in the next three years.
...Reuters reported in October that Google was having trouble
finding Indian workers proficient in the languages and design
technologies used in the latest generation of Web sites.
This year, India’s largest software company, Tata Consultancy
Services, plans to add 30,000 people to its current work force of
72,000.
...In the past, Tata Consultancy Services needed only to turn to the
top engineering schools in the country: the nine campuses of the Indian
Institutes of Technology and a few others gaining admission can be more
difficult than getting into the Ivy League.
...The number of technical schools in India, including engineering
colleges, has more than tripled in the last 10 years, according to the
All India Council of Technical Education. Most are privately run.
A new kind of institution has emerged to offer intensive English
language training and instruction in technical skills required for the
workplace for those between college and career. They are called
finishing schools, and Nasscom is rolling out its own by early next
year.
...Higher education is still available only to a tiny slice of India’s
young. No more than 10 percent of Indians ages 18 to 25 are enrolled in
college, according to official figures. Nearly 40 percent of Indians
over the age of 15 are illiterate.
The industry is lobbying hard to allow private investment in Indian
higher education. Right now the government allows only nonprofit
ventures, and often they are of varying quality or are the
brainchildren of politically connected entrepreneurs.
The Commerce Ministry has recently floated the idea of private
foreign investment in higher education. Indians account for among the
largest groups of foreign students in the United States, and India
increasingly sends students to other countries, like Australia and
Canada.
Nandan M. Nilekani, the chief executive of Infosys, one of India’s
biggest providers of technology and back-office services to Western
companies, calls the situation a crossroads for his country.
With more than half of its population under 25, he said, India could
educate its young and open job opportunities for them, or be left with
a large, potentially restive pool of unskilled, unemployable youth. “It
is a golden opportunity,” he said, “which can be frittered away if we
don’t do the right thing.”
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