Posts Tagged ‘South Africa’

India undisputed leader in offshore services: Gartner

July 25, 2008

India remains the “undisputed leader” in a list of the top 30 countries for offshore services prepared by IT market research major Gartner Inc.

The research firm based in Connecticut, US, applied a list of 10 criteria to find its top 30, but many of the conclusions are already well known – India is the “undisputed leader” in offshore services, with China, Russia and Brazil providing credible alternatives, while Ireland, Israel, Northern Ireland and South Africa are strong in language skills.

According to Gartner, however, there’s a stampede of new locations determined to get more offshore business. For the 30 countries that met its criteria, Gartner reports, another 35 were viable contenders, giving companies plenty of choices in 2008.

And of those 35, 13 “came darn close to making the list”, according to Helen Huntley, an author of the Gartner report prepared in December 2007.

Those coming “darn close” are Colombia, Guatemala, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico and Venezuela in the Americas; Indonesia, Mauritius and Thailand in Asia-Pacific; and Belarus, Egypt, Latvia and Morocco in Europe, Middle East and Africa, or the EMEA region.

The aim of the Gartner study was not to rank each country but to help sourcing managers determine which locations are right for their particular needs, Huntley said.

“There are risks and rewards to any part of the world you go to, and everything from service delivery to concerns about security and language to consider,” he said.

The seven countries from the Americas are becoming or already are attractive destinations for US companies, but a lack of government support is restricting offshore development, Gartner said.

Only Mexico rated “very good” in this area, followed by Canada and Uruguay. Canada and Mexico rated higher than Brazil in the quality of the labour pool.

In terms of infrastructure, think twice about Argentina, the only country to rate lower than “good”. Canada earned excellent marks in most categories, except in the big rate limiter: cost.

The Asia Pacific region boasts the most countries in the top 30 list – 10. India rules, with China at its heels.

Asia has also come a long way in language skills. Only China, Sri Lanka and Vietnam rated less than “good”.

As for government support, Gartner said this was strong in China, India and Singapore.

The rest of the countries are a “mixed bag” of pluses and minuses. Australia, New Zealand and Singapore, and an increasingly proactive China, rate high on infrastructure and educational systems.

Vietnam leads the pack on cost, earning an “excellent”, while China, India, Pakistan, the Philippines and Sri Lanka rated “very good”.

Not surprisingly, cost and risk correlate tightly: the higher the cost, the lower the risks. Vietnam, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam scored either “fair” or “poor” in the category of political and economic environment.

The established EMEA countries generally score high on educational systems, infrastructure and language, either because of their high English-speaking population or because they offer other useful language skills.

No country earned higher than a “good” in government support.

Only Russia rated a “very good” in quality and quantity of labour pool. Newcomers like Slovakia and Romania scored well on cost, but costs in the EMEA region in general are in flux, Gartner warned.

The EMEA countries are also parochial; with the exception of Russia, few countries have a network of local service providers outside their own country, it added .

Courtesy :- EconomicTimes

G8 supports India on its growing energy needs

July 11, 2008

In a major breakthrough for the troubled Indo-US nuclear deal, the powerful group of eight (G8 ) industrialised countries on Wednesday decided to adopt a “more robust” approach to civil nuclear cooperation with India to help meet its growing energy needs.

“We look forward to working with India, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Nuclear Suppliers Group and other partners to advance India’s non-proliferation commitments and progress so as to facilitate a more robust approach to civil nuclear cooperation with India to help it meet its growing energy needs in a manner that enhances and reinforces the global non-proliferation regime,” the Chair’s Summary released at the end of the G8 summit said here.

The statement came hours after US President George W Bush met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh here on the sidelines of the G8 summit.

The G8 is made up of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.

Leaders of 17 major economies met on the sidelines of the G8 meeting and adopted a declaration which affirmed the critical role of technology in meeting the global challenges of energy security and climate change.

“We will promote the uptake and use of such technologies, including renewables, cleaner and low-carbon technologies and for those of us interested, nuclear power,” the declaration said.

Leaders of the European Union, France, Italy, South Korea, Russia, Indonesia, South Africa and Mexico also attended the meeting before adopting the declaration on ‘Energy Security and Climate Change’.

Courtesy :- Economic Times

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