Microsoft Corp. plans to invest $1.7 billion in India over a period of four years to deepen its presence in the fast-growing software powerhouse, Chairman Bill Gates announced during his visit.
Gates, on a four-day trip to India in his fourth visit to the country, also said Microsoft would focus on research aimed at spreading low-cost computing in India, where high entry-level costs limit the spread of computers among its billion-plus people.
About half of Microsoft’s investment will be spent on beefing up its existing research and development centre, its global software delivery unit and expanding to 33 more cities by opening 700 retail outlets.
We have about 4,000 people (in India); we would be growing that by 3,000 over the next several years, Gates told reporters at a news conference. The human resources here are really fantastic. Our employment growth here would be far more rapid than in the US.
Microsoft, the world’s largest software maker, is tapping into India’s booming $17.2 billion software services industry for skilled workers at costs far below average Western salaries.
The country’s $17-billion export-oriented software services industry, expected to grow by nearly a third in the year to March 2006, has been a magnet for multinationals lured by wages in India that are often a fifth of Western counterparts.
Many large foreign companies plan more investment in India, attracted by low costs, an educated work force, and an economy forecast to grow 7 percent to 7.5 percent in the fiscal year to March.
Among big technology groups, Chipmaker Intel Corp said it would pour $1.1 billion into its Indian operations in the medium term, including setting up a venture fund to take stakes in start-ups. Another network equipment maker Cisco Systems has announced billion-dollar investments in the past two months.
US bank JP Morgan Chase & Co said this week it hoped to hire 4,500 graduates in India over the next two years.
WIDENING REACH
To increase sales, Microsoft has launched software in local Indian languages to ride a software boom in the world’s second-most-populous country.
Microsoft out-sources much of its software development work to Indian firms such as Infosys Technologies Ltd, and Wipro Ltd. The government and all the companies have a role to play — making sure that there is hyper-competition for laying fiber in all villages.
Gates said Microsoft would seek to sell more to India’s small and medium-sized companies, which employ 40 million people, or 12 percent of the working population, but have very little in terms of IT infrastructure.
The company plans to bring out software in more Indian languages since only 5 percent of the billion-plus population understands and writes English. It also has a differential pricing strategy for India, where piracy levels are among the highest in Asia.
Gates did not comment directly when asked what Microsoft planned to do in South Korea, where it lost an antitrust case and was ordered to separate its instant messaging service from its Windows software and allow rival products on its system.
I do think customers should wish that the kind of competition that exists in the software industry is in every part of the economy, he said.