With the war ending, this industry is poised to be among the top export earners during the next five years, Mr. Ratnayake said, adding that it has the potential of creating more 50,000 direct jobs from the present 15,000. The value addition of service experts from the IT/BPO industry is a near 100 %. The industry is based on knowledge workers and creates high paying jobs for educated youth. Each job in IT/BPO industry creates 3-4 other indirect jobs in the economy, he told Business Times, on the sidelines of the briefing.This large employment multiplier effect exerts significant economic impact by way of employment creation. Therefore the IT/BPO industry has significant potential to drive regional development as the industry picks up and moves to regional centres. The industry also has no negative impact on the environment, he added.Large companies have contributed to over 70% of the export revenue with medium and small companies making up the balance. SLASSCOM (Sri Lanka Association of Software and Services Companies) Secretary General Mano Sekaram who is also the chairman of the EDB's advisory committee for the ICT and BPO sectors pointed out that the key finding of the survey was that 78% of the companies are quality certified by international standard agencies.He noted that Sri Lanka will be able to attract major IT companies in the world to set up their companies
With the war ending, this industry is poised to be among the top export earners during the next five years, Mr. Ratnayake said, adding that it has the potential of creating more 50,000 direct jobs from the present 15,000. The value addition of service experts from the IT/BPO industry is a near 100 %. The industry is based on knowledge workers and creates high paying jobs for educated youth. Each job in IT/BPO industry creates 3-4 other indirect jobs in the economy, he told Business Times, on the sidelines of the briefing.This large employment multiplier effect exerts significant economic impact by way of employment creation. Therefore the IT/BPO industry has significant potential to drive regional development as the industry picks up and moves to regional centres. The industry also has no negative impact on the environment, he added.Large companies have contributed to over 70% of the export revenue with medium and small companies making up the balance. SLASSCOM (Sri Lanka Association of Software and Services Companies) Secretary General Mano Sekaram who is also the chairman of the EDB's advisory committee for the ICT and BPO sectors pointed out that the key finding of the survey was that 78% of the companies are quality certified by international standard agencies.He noted that Sri Lanka will be able to attract major IT companies in the world to set up their companies