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Shortage of skilled IT workforce looms over India: Nasscom official
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SME Times News Bureau | 19 Feb, 2019
As the demand for disruptive technologies like Artificial Intelligence
(AI) and Data Analytics grows, shortage of a skilled IT workforce to run
them is posing a challenge to the stake-holders, Nasscom, the
industry's apex body, has said.
"There is an urgent need to
re-skill about 50 per cent of India's IT workforce, as demand for it in
new technologies remains unmet," Nasscom's IT-ITeS (IT enabled Services)
Sector Skills Council chief executive Amit Aggarwal told IANS here.
The
National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom) is
the apex body representing the country's IT and business process
management (BPM) industry.
The demand-supply gap for skills
affected the industry's performance in 2018, due to shortage of 140,000
skilled techies for 500,000 jobs in the industry across verticals.
"Going
forward, the industry will face a shortage of 230,000 skilled techies
as jobs in AI and Big Data are estimated to be 780,000 by 2021,"
Aggarwal pointed out.
In a report titled 'The Future of Jobs
2018', the World Economic Forum (WEF) said around 54 per cent of the
global workforce had to be re-skilled or up-skilled to work in
disruptive and digital technologies spawning the virtual world.
AI,
big data analytics and cloud computing will dominate businesses across
verticals till 2022, changing job profiles for geeks, while legacy jobs
will vanish, the report said.
Admitting that the
multi-billion-dollar IT industry had a vital role in creating jobs as
well as in churning out the required skilled workforce, Aggarwal said
India was well-positioned to bridge the demand-supply gap, as it had a
wealth of talent in science, technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM).
"Adoption of new technologies will change the profile of
present jobs, which will evolve into higher domains with more
automation that pose challenges to the $167 billion Indian IT services
industry," Aggarwal asserted.
One of the challenges is to
identify the nature of jobs in future and re-skill the present workforce
for the transition to digital work.
As the industry adopts to
new technologies spanning AI, machine learning (ML), data analytics,
automation, robotics, blockchain, cloud and the Internet of Things
(IoT), companies with legacy systems and obsolete workforce face
challenges to survive the disruption.
The apex body's 'Future
Skills' digital platform, unveiled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in
February 2018, has identified 10 key technologies in which maximum job
creation can occur in the IT and IT-enabled Services sectors.
The
digital portal makes resources available for techies to hone their
skills. According to the platform, technologies which will create new
jobs include AI, cyber security, IoT, virtual reality, robotic process
automation, big data analytics, blockchain, three-dimension (3-D)
printing, cloud computing and social and mobile.
"About 70 job
roles were identified across 10 technologies that will require the
future workforce to have about 150 varied skills," Aggarwal said.
Besides
training the workforce in new skills, there is a need to include
evolving technologies in the curriculum for the students, Aggarwal
noted.
The industry body has tied up with state-run premier
institutions like the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras to hone the
skills of students entering the workforce in the IT sector.
"The
industry is spending about Rs 10,000-crore for re-skilling and human
resource development," Aggarwal pointed out. "Making the system agile
and flexible can help in preparing the IT workforce for the future,"
Aggarwal reiterated.
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