6. I.T. HARDWARE INDUSTRY IN INDIA
Contribution in GDP 5.9%
Annual Revenue $60 billion
Employment 2.3 million
7. THE INDIAN ADVANTAGE
India ranks as the most competitive supply of skilled Labour.
Of the 32 companies worldwide having SEI-CMM Level 5
certification – the highest quality standard in software, 16 are
Indian companies.
Indian companies have earned credibility in delivering to mission-
critical requirements, following the successful implementation of
Y2K and Euro conversion solutions.
50 portals being launched in India every month.
170 Indian software companies have already acquired quality
certification : ISO 9000/SEI.
Large pool of software professionals, proficient in English.
Friendly government, developing economy and political stability
8. IT INDUSTRY OF INDIA
Particulars FY 2004 FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
IT Services 10.4 13.5 17.8 23.7
- Exports 7.3 10.0 13.13 18.1
- Domestic 3.1 3.5 4.5 5.6
ITES-BPO 3.4 5.2 7.2 9.5
- Exports 3.1 4.6 6.3 8.3
- Domestic 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2
R&D products 2.9 3.9 5.3 6.5
- Exports 2.5 3.1 4.0 4.9
- Domestic 0.4 0.7 1.3 1.6
Hardware 5.0 5.9 7.0 8.2
Total IT industry 21.6 28.4 37.4 47.8
- Exports 13.4 18.2 24.1 31.9
- Domestic 8.3 10.2 13.2 15.9
All figures are in US $ Billion
10. NET PROFIT IN 2009
`1,319.63 CRORES
Total Assets Total Revenue in 2009
`4,001.97 `10,229.41
Network Desktop/laptop
routers and computers, LCD
switches monitors
11. CURRENT UPDATES FROM THE INDUSTRY
HP preps updated business netbook, Mini 5103
Logitech intros new G-series PC gaming peripherals.
Microsoft readying the Arc Touch Mouse for September.
AMD Ontario –equipped netbooks due out early next year.
Intel settles antitrust suit with FTC, admits no
wrongdoing.
12. OPPORTUNITIES
Abundant investment opportunities exist in the
following thrust areas in India:
Satellite-based Communication
Communication Infrastructure
Gateways
Wireless
Software Development
IT-enabled Services
IT-enabled education
Optic Fibre Cable
Data Centres & Server Farms
13. CONCLUSION
IT is a fast-growing, export-oriented sector
Also definite potential for contributing to broad-based
growth – much more than software exports
IT’s success exposes key bottlenecks and areas where
reform is needed
Policy initiatives have to be general, not sector-specific,
or narrowly targeted – IT as “the thin end of the wedge”
IT can also contribute to broader economic development
– governance,education, operational efficiency, market
efficiency