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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

Global centres in India slow hiring as AI reshapes work, ANSR CEO says

Global capability centres in India ​are taking a measured ​approach to hiring as companies are wary about the impact ​of geopolitical uncertainties and growing AI adoption, the CEO of ANSR, which helps firms build and run global centres, said.

India is home to more than half of the ‌world's global ⁠centres as ⁠companies prefer its large skilled workforce, lower operating costs and rising ability to support ​high-value jobs across technology, finance and engineering.

However, the rise of artificial intelligence could test ​that edge by reducing headcounts for some roles and reshaping the kind of work global centres do.

"There is a sense of cautiousness," Lalit Ahuja, ​also the founder of ANSR, told Reuters on ⁠Monday. "Companies are ‌hiring fewer people, just as a matter of abundant ​caution."

ANSR counts ​FedEx, Target and Lowe's among its clients.

Ahuja says that ⁠hiring is being slashed by 30% to 50%, with ​some firms that had planned global centres with more ​than 5,000 employees scaling those ambitions back to about 2,000. He did not give further details.

India is expected to host nearly 2,200 global centres and a talent base of 2.36 million by the end of the fiscal year that ends in March, IT industry body Nasscom and ‌consultancy Zinnov said in a report this month.

Flexible workforce

With hiring by large global centres subdued in the near term, new ​entrants would ​drive growth, Ahuja ⁠said, as companies build a core workforce, alongside a larger flexible pool that can be scaled up or down based on business needs.

That reflects growing ​fatigue with a "wait-and-watch" approach, as companies choose to hire fewer people than planned, begin work on a smaller scale and see how it evolves.

"Companies are now undertaking bold experiments," Ahuja said.

"You can always hire more, but it's always difficult to let go of people."

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