HomeNewsInterviewNarayana Murthy says IT industry ‘ebbing’, calls for salary cuts to protect jobs

Narayana Murthy says IT industry ‘ebbing’, calls for salary cuts to protect jobs

As the IT industry’s growth starts “ebbing,” it would not be able to provide employment to armies of engineers, says Narayana Murthy

June 01, 2017 / 15:59 IST
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Rank 7 | NR Narayana Murthy & family | Company: Infosys | Net Wealth: Rs 16,400 crore | Co-founder of Infosys, NR Narayana Murthy and his family only added 1 percent to their overall wealth this year, becoming one of the ten richest tech billionaires in India.
Rank 7 | NR Narayana Murthy & family | Company: Infosys | Net Wealth: Rs 16,400 crore | Co-founder of Infosys, NR Narayana Murthy and his family only added 1 percent to their overall wealth this year, becoming one of the ten richest tech billionaires in India.

Malini Bhupta Moneycontrol News

India's USD 150-billion information and technology sector is in the eye of a perfect storm, as employees organize themselves into unions to protest against layoffs. While industry leaders and the government are busy denying there is a problem, the father of Indian IT, NR Narayana Murthy and Founder of Infosys, told Moneycontrol in an interview that as the IT industry’s growth starts “ebbing,” it would not be able to provide employment to armies of engineers.

Leaders and seniors have to sacrifice more compared to the middle and junior level people, said Murthy. Such sacrifice will have to be borne by employees as well as investors. He explained: “In other words, there will have to be salary cuts based on the disposable income of employees and there will have to be stringent cost control. If these are not just sufficient, then profits will have to be sacrificed and dividends will have to be reduced to take care of the employees with low disposable income and keep the corporation strong in tough times."

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Murthy said that the market for the IT industry may shrink and that is beyond anybody. And when that happens, it is very difficult to absorb new talent at the same level as in the past.

"The IT industry has had a high for 20 plus years, and now it looks like it is entering an ebb. This has happened in the past in various industries and will continue to happen in the future for various industries. There is no point in blaming the IT industry," he said.