$27 Billion. Going by the experience of IT majors operating in the mainland, however, it now appears that the Chinese IT potential has been vastly overestimated. Today, many IT companies, both Indian as well as MNCs, weighed down by the acute shortage of IT professionals in the mainland, are quietly moving back their operations into India or catering to their clients jointly from their development centers in India and China.
China admittedly enjoys significant potential for the growth and development of the IT and ITeS industries. Advantages like quality infrastructure, the Chinese predominance in hardware, a huge domestic IT market (estimated to be around $36.48 billion in the year 2002), geographic proximity and cultural synergies with the Japanese and Korean markets and the vast pool of technically skilled personnel churned out each year by the Chinese universities all make China a lucrative destination, at least on paper, for the IT majors. In fact, estimates have it that China produces a pool of 250,000 engineering graduates each year as opposed to around 150,000 by India , which is a win-win situation for the IT majors when average salaries in the sector have been spiraling off late.
In spite of these enormous advantages, China still has to overcome many hurdles in its bid to emerge as an IT powerhouse. Even though China has an advantage in terms of the absolute number of professionals it churns out each year, the ground reality remains that key high-end technology skill-sets are scarce and very expensive in China . While low end programming skills are inexpensive and relatively abundant, people with higher end skills and project-management skills are difficult to come by professionals with system integration skills, especially for large-scale integration, are not easily available. Similarly, high-end technology skill sets such as Oracle Apps, Data Warehousing and SAP Consulting and implementation skills are very expensive. China may be able to quickly educate large volumes of talented software developers, but higher skilled IS professionals (such as project managers and systems architects) take years to cultivate and mature. According to Gartner Research , China will need to increase its pool of skilled IT resources by 26 times by the year 2007. This is an uphill task by any standard and the chance of China measuring up to such demand is hard to contemplate. India , in comparison, is expected to have to increase its IT pool by only 2.5 times, which is eminently achievable.
The immaturity of the Chinese IT industry is another hurdle that they will find hard to overcome. There are over 6,000 software and application development (AD) service companies in China today, with the majority of these companies employing fewer than 50 professionals. These companies cannot bid or participate in large contracts because of their small size. India in comparison has around 3,000 software companies, just half that of China , but many of these companies are of significant size employing several thousand employees. There are three majors clocking revenues in excess of a billion dollars.
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