BPO looking for more workers—Arroyo

MANILA, Philippines—President Macapagal-Arroyo on Friday said a business process outsourcing (BPO) company has denied reports that it had laid off hundreds of Filipino employees and was in fact looking for more workers to hire.

The President said Malacañang was alarmed by reports that Advanced Contact Solutions Inc. (ACS) had laid off 700 workers, and verified these with the company itself.

“We checked with that center, ACS, and they totally denied it,” she said in a speech at the launch of the UP-Ayala Land Techno Hub at the University of the Philippines on Friday.

According to Ms Arroyo, ACS said it had been receiving calls from other call centers which expressed interest in hiring the laid-off workers.

“But ACS said we’re not laying off anyone, we’re looking for more,” she said.

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines called the attention of the Department of Labor and Employment to the supposed mass layoffs, urging the DOLE to redeploy the displaced workers to other BPOs.

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Indian BPO creates jobs in Northern Ireland

We started operations here two years ago in October 2006. We now have over 600 staff in Derry and [the] announcement of 160 jobs will bring it up to around 800. The staff have done a phenomenal job over the last two years with the customer, and we have a very positive relationship with the customer," said Shaun Harnett, a Firstsource manager.

The Indian-BPO attributes its hiring spree to a successful relationship with Sky.

"What's working for us in this relationship is the ability to hit targets every month for the last two years. I do think there is a significant difference here. The people are very friendly and are committed to the job. We've had a lot of people coming to us and what we are looking for are people with an ability to talk - something the people in Derry are good at," added Harnett.

Firstsource opened its first office in 2006 and employs 550 individuals in Belfast. The new positions will be filled in the Londonderry facility, which is staffed by more than 600 workers. An increasing number of Indian companies have chosen Northern Ireland as their European base, including HCL, Polaris, Pix Transmission and Tech Mahindra.

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Call centers and business process outsourcing providers are among industry sectors in India that are likely to cut more than 25% of their staffing soon, according to a report by a trade body.

The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) said on Wednesday that companies in those sectors were faced with shrinking margins.

The prediction comes as the Diwali festival in India draws to a close. Companies postponed layoffs until the festival was over on humanitarian grounds, ASSOCHAM said.

Earlier this month, top Indian outsourcers like Infosys, Wipro and Tata Consultancy Services reported slower revenue and profit growth in the quarter to Sept. 30. These companies get most of their revenue from the U.S. and Europe, with a large number of their customers in the troubled banking and financial services sectors. (Listen to a podcast asking whether outsourcers can survive the down economy.)

India's economy is also slowing down. The country's central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, last week cut its estimate for the country's gross domestic product growth for the fiscal year ending next March 31 to a range of 7.5% to 8%, from an earlier forecast of 8%.

New hiring by India's IT and services outsourcing industry has slowed down, but companies are not yet considering large-scale cuts, according to analysts.