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IT workers join unions to fight job cuts

India’s National Association of Software Companies is struggling to convince members of Unites Professionals, the fledgling but fast-growing information technology labor union, that the IT industry is not resorting to large-scale job cuts, nor is it facing an unstable future.

The labor union has claimed that software companies are adopting a number of “unfair means” to cope with the economic downturn.

Pramod Bhasin, chairman of NASSCOM, the industry’s apex trade body, says he is working overtime to steer the IT industry out of “one of the worst economic slowdowns of our times.” But he feels bogged down with the labor union’s concerns.

On May 1 – Labor Day – Unites launched a month-long “Stop the Pink Slip” campaign. The union aims to collect 100,000 petitions from disgruntled IT workers to force the NASSCOM chairman to pressure the Indian IT industry to stop cutting jobs.

If Bhasin is losing sleep over the growing power of the labor union, the heads of U.S. IT companies are faring no better. Over the past few months Alliance IBM, the New York-based union of IBM technology workers, and the Washington Alliance of Technology Workers, the Redmond-based high-tech workers union formed by Microsoft contract employees, have been running similar campaigns against job cuts announced recently by IT companies.

Believing they could always leverage their knowledge and skills to negotiate salaries and benefits, technology workers may have largely avoided unions until now. However, as the IT sectors in India and the United States have started cutting jobs to cope with the global slowdown, technology workers have suddenly woken up to the benefits of joining labor union movements.

“We have experienced a surge of new members in Unites in the last six months,” said Karthik Shekhar, the union’s secretary general. The union had about 4,000 members in September last year, and now claims to have added 14,000 more.

Alliance IBM’s membership has reached 5,600, which includes 103 new members since January 2009, while website visits recorded a quantum jump of 260,000 hits per month compared to the average 45,000 a month last year. “So we know more employees are learning of the Alliance,” said Lee Conrad, the group’s national coordinator.

Union leaders say they are not taking a militant approach. Both Conrad and Karthik say they are merely looking for ways to protect their members’ livelihoods.

India’s IT industry includes call centers and back office services with annual revenues of US$72 billion, $47 billion of which is from exports. Of that figure, 60 percent comes from the United States.

The industry has made thousands of middle-class Indians wealthy enough to lead first-world lifestyles. Yet a large section of IT workers are still oppressed and exploited, according to Unites.

“Unlike other industries, human assets are the only assets that have helped Indian IT companies to earn billions over the years,” said Karthik. “But whenever Indian IT companies face hard times, instead of cutting down on other costs, or changing business models like focusing on other skills or other markets, the first step Indian IT companies take is large-scale job cuts.”

Consequently, the industry has seen a significant and steady erosion of its employee base. This problem is more acute in the current slowdown.

“Taking the cue of the recession, Indian IT companies are resorting to many unfair means like using unscientific and biased performance evaluation to initiate layoffs, increasing working hours, cutting down privileges and even forcing workers to resign,” said Karthik.

While large-scale layoffs are troubling the Indian workforce, the U.S. unions see India as the problem. Conrad says that Alliance IBM does not consider the Indian IT worker its enemy, but he is opposed to IBM’s policy of shifting work to other countries like India and terminating U.S. workers.

“I suspect that some companies are using the recession as an excuse and are cutting jobs to boost their profit margins,” said Conrad. “IBM, which is very profitable, is cutting jobs here in the U.S. and shifting the work to countries such as India, China and Philippines, as well as regions like South America and Eastern Europe.”

At some point, he predicts, IBM will move work out of India to even less costly areas of the world. “The goal of companies like IBM is to seek areas of lower wages and taxes in order to benefit the corporate executives and stockholders,” said Conrad.

WashTech has similar grievances. “We are opposed to the policy of American companies hiring H-1B workers to retrench American workers. We consider this an abuse of the H-1B visa concept,” said Les French, president of WashTech. The H-1B is a nonimmigrant visa that allows U.S. employers to temporarily hire foreign workers in specialty occupations. “Their use of H-1B visas these days has nothing to do with a shortage of workers in America; it’s a tool to cut costs at IT workers’ expense,” said French.

IT union leaders say that compared to the unions of brick-and-mortar industries, the IT union movements in both India and the United States have a long way to go to achieve their objectives. Yet the intensity of the economic downturn has helped them achieve some success already.

“Our movement has been successful in gaining media attention on IBM’s secret job cuts and the off-shoring of jobs,” said Conrad. “We are now gaining the attention of political leaders, other unions and citizens of the U.S. who at one time believed IBM could do no wrong.”

Conrad added that Alliance’s political representatives have been able to convince the Obama administration to consider measures to halt job losses due to off-shoring.

For Unites, the recession has been more than helpful. “For three years our movement struggled to gain recognition,” said Karthik. “But ever since we predicted in September last year that Indian IT would see 50,000 cuts in the next six months – a prediction that proved to be correct in just three months – the industry has started taking us far more seriously.”

Unites’ efforts have helped stem job cuts in the last few months, and have also helped many to extract better deals. The union’s involvement forced one global IT company to raise the salary of its entire Indian workforce to US$1,000 per year. The company, it appears, had been paying its Indian employees less than its international workers who were doing the same job at the same location.

Despite these tough actions, however, the attitude on the part of unions and employers is for the most part cooperative.

“Understandably it is a very difficult time, not only for employers in the U.S. but also employers in other parts of the world,” said Les French. “But what employers and employees need to do in the current crisis is to sit down and take a look at the labor needs on a global basis to determine where every dollar spent could be best utilized to solve the problem.”

“There is also a need to move back to a level playing field,” he added.

news courtesy:http://www.upiasia.com/
       

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23 comments

  1. a bunch of idiots…

  2. why kenney, don;t you think the ITES/IT people need not any unions? and labor laws are not applicable for the poor fellows working in IT industry?

  3. we have an association named unities professional organisation
    http://www.unitespro.org
    how many interrested to work with

    operations stred in trivandrum

  4. mr Kenney

    bcz u ar an enterprenur we expect nothing positive from u

  5. i reiterate. people in trivandrum need to make sure they keep their jobs coz trivandrum has no other opportunities to offer you.
    so if u are from around trivandrum and are forced to work out of trivandrum and if you so happen to lose your job, you are DONE! this is probably the only city in the world which has nothing other than IT. and that too very little uncompetitive IT. no big players no new jobs. sad scene out here. it is important to have some protection although unionising the work force is not the best idea.

  6. I don’t think joining a union and forcing the companies is a right move. When will we stop the negative attitude and start finding opportunities from the down fall. Every company is looking for the best talent and they will pay whatever it takes, as long as it is profitable.

    There are better options, why don’t the association itself create a pool of freelancers, get projects and implement them. The association can distribute the profit within its members. Since the association claims talents from every verticals it can manage things better than any other company.

    Only issue is someone has to take the responsibility and it is a far difficult option compared to blaming others for not paying according to our expectations.

  7. Unfortunately this ‘Union’ idea comes only when some ‘Problem’ comes.

    Even the poison is good if we use it for the right purpose.

    We should not force a company to keep bad-performers. You have job as long as you perform well. It is not just your quality of work, it have something to do with your discipline, behaviour, skills, dedication etc.

  8. I second praveen. but what happened if companies take it as a chance to fire someone?

  9. say no to unions. the coward communists are awaiting for enter in to Technopark to make a union.

  10. say Big NO to unions in IT. unions spoiled everything everywhere, look in to the latest port trust problem, because of the attitude of the unions the business is going to other ports like chennai and thoothukkudi.

    we are loosing business because of these unions and employees with out any responsibility. so I’m strongly disagreeing any attempts to make a union in technopark infopark or any other places in India.

  11. Technopark is gone once some colors entered.

    They are not able to enter into Technopark just because it needs some ‘literacy’. It is difficult for a person with 6th standard qualification to become an IT professional unless he have high skills.

    Unions or Associations are good if we use it for collective bargains, get-togethers etc.

  12. @PraVeeN

    the union initiatives is not taken by 6th standard guy

    it’s by some techies have enouh experince

  13. @vik, I was talking about aftereffects

    1. Techies start ‘Union’ = OK
    2. Colors comes to ‘Union’ = NOT OK
    3. Just like in any old factories in Kerala/India – ‘Leaders’ becomes ‘Gods’ = NOT OK
    4. Strike, lock out, unemployment = NOT OK

    I am always a supporter a supporter of ‘Union’ or ‘Association’ or a ‘Co-operative society’ or what ever it is… if there is a well writter bylaw, etc.

  14. How can we guarantee that a co-operative society later turn to a union with political backup?

    NO UNIONS PLEASE

  15. Unions are not good for any growing industry. let us say no to trade unions at least in IT

  16. A all IT people need only money,but all above agnist union gona lost their job soon,then plz dont blame ur employer in ur life time.work like a slave.make money in ur life then plz die due to helth problems

    with out ny social commit ments thts all

  17. Please open your eyes.

    This blog is run by a group of people to fight for the welfare of IT peoples in technopark irespective of the employer’s.
    Please take the case of IBS lay off and banglore move issue

    most of the IBS employee admit that due to this blog IBS limited thier lay off to just 27 people that 150+

    and stoped the step towards banglore move ment

    why IBS takes thse decesions??

    is it due to the people who wrote agnist the union called IBS mangemnt and falled on ther legs to save those employees???

    plz answer all above agnist union

    u calle IBS mangement??

  18. an employee welfare union is needed for IT employees. now you are getting good payment. and i know most of the IT people does not have any retirement plans or good investment plans other than the risky stock market investment ( they are doing it for fun, other than i dont know is there anyone can make a living out of that )

    So think about a situation in IT after 10-15 years. we can’t predict how the situations would be. so a union is the need of this hour to unite and stand together.

  19. Stop The Pink Slip – Campaign
    UNITES Professionals Union for ITES employees in India has taken up
    Stop The Pink Slip – Campaign as more than 5% of Indian IT & ITES
    employees are threatened of job loss in the next two quarters. On 1
    May 2009 we are launching Stop The Pink Slip – Campaign which will run
    the entire month and the signatures collected will be handed over to
    NASSCOM the IT/ITES employer body.
    We will be sending 1000 cards each and this has to be signed by IT &
    ITES employees and returned to us.
    UNITES strives to create a distinct and cogent link between employers
    & employees at all levels but our repeated request to NASSCOM has not
    resulted in any prevention of job loss, so we have launched the Stop
    The Pink Slip – Campaign with active support of IT & ITES employees
    across India. Please find enclosed actual Stop The Pink Slip –
    Campaign material.
    Please keep visiting the UNITES website for regular updates on Stop
    The Pink Slip – Campaign! Visit website at
    http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/StopthePinkSlip/index.html and
    register your solidarity.
    Looking forward for your valuable support

  20. Don’t spoil IT by making unions.

  21. dolly wht’s ur age may be 25+

    wht will happen ur IT carrier when u ar 40+

  22. nothing will happen vik. what you can do for IT people? making a union and spoling a well performing industry?

  23. Indian IT industry giving a lot of job opertunites that’s a fact.
    But the indian IT industry is going in some wrong path,so why recession badly affected IT.
    Some problems i identified in IT industry.

    1: Lay off based on performance,we found that this is a trick used by I comapnies to fire employe’s.we got news that infosys gona conduct its performance mesure soon most of the guys inside infy told me that they will not passs on that process,beacause management decides to lay off some of their work force to make profit(note that layoff is for increasing their profit margin).

    so we want to ask infy why they are under perforaming,if so change ur hiring policy.we wpould say infy to invest some money in colleges like CET,TKM and others gave industrial training to students on their college and elect based on that.that will increase you profit.

    2: Indian IT industry is not going in the right way we are now working as third write coders for some foreign countries.

    whts india’s contribution to field of computer science.

    wht’s the contribution major comapnies also

    3:Why the comapnies failing to identyfy the potential local clients.according to our reserch we got lakhs worth work in one month from non metro cities

    4:Localization of IT is required and a lot more points

    a lot more we are identyfying them and finding solution for bettrment of employee employeer relation ship

    we need ur support

    An IT tarde union supporter

    vik