"There has been a lot of debate, and by any standards of economy, this talk of job decline in the IT sector is motivated," Prasad said after a meeting with the captains of the Indian tech sector.
He noted that the IT sector has been India's largest employer, employing 40 lakh people directly.
"You know by any standard scrutiny, the way Indian digital economy is rising, the question of slackness in jobs is absolutely factually incorrect. Obviously, those who don't perform, will have to go. This annual tripping in case of any institution is natural," Prasad said.
Tech Mahindra chief CP Gurnani said employees need to re-skill themselves in areas like artificial intelligence (AI) and Blockchain as these technologies offer newer avenues of growth.
"We need to re-skill and re-purpose ourselves. We have a list of different skills, where we need people... If you re- skill yourself in blockchain or AI, there is no shortage of jobs globally," he said.
Infosys Co-founder Kris Gopalakrishnan said that there is no job loss in the country. Instead, the growth has slowed down which is adversely impacting new hiring.
He added that global economy has slowed down and there are uncertainities in the horizon.
"Visa regime in several countries have tightened becuase they have issues of job losses. The base itself is every large. On that base, growth of 6 per cent is itself very large," Gopalakrishnan said.
This has compounded fears that thousands of employees in the sector could be shown the door over the next few weeks.
The IT sector is already battling challenges in business environment and stricter work permit regime in countries like the US, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand. Various employee unions have approached labour commissioners and state governments to intervene in the matter.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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