Malaysia Remains World's Third Leading And Asean's Top Offshoring Destination
NEW YORK, Feb 5 (Bernama) -- Malaysia continues to occupy the third  leading position, after India and China, in the list of the world's  leading offshoring destinations, according to global management  consulting firm A.T. Kearney's latest Global Services Location Index  (GSLI).
 
  Malaysia also remains a force to reckon with amongst Asean member  countries which are fiercely competing for a slice of the global  offshoring pie.
 
  While Indonesia continues to rank at number five, Thailand has slipped  down from the fourth to seventh ranking and the Philippines from the  seventh to ninth ranking.
 
  The descent of the Philippines seems to be quite remarkable because it  was touting itself as "the world's ideal offshoring destination" and  even perceived at one time to steal the thunder from India.
 
  The dark horse within the Asean group, however, is Vietnam which is  inching its way up and is currently eighth ranking up from number ten.
 
  Asia dominates the top ten positions in GSLI.
 
  There are also significant changes taking place in the global business  climate. Factors such as wage changes and currency flux are expected to  cause major changes in the rankings.
 
  While a sluggish recovery continues to create the kind of pressure for  economies that are crucial for the outsourcing business, an increasingly  complex global economic environment has led to major changes in the  ranking of the most attractive offshoring destinations, according to  A.T. Kearney's GSLI.
 
  India continues to rule the roost. A combination of human resources and  low costs have, once again, placed India, China and Malaysia in the top  three spots -- positions they have held since GSLI's inauguration in  2003.
 
  At the same time, however, currency movement has helped strengthen the  competitive position of states whose costs had formerly kept them far  down on the list, including the Baltic States, the United Kingdom (UK),  Mexico and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
 
  Indeed, the Middle East and North Africa have become increasingly  attractive, according to GSLI, because of their proximity to Europe and  the vast talent pool.
 
  Egypt was the leader in the region and fourth worldwide, directly behind Malaysia.
 
  However, the rankings were compiled before the recent political unrest  erupted. Consequently, the political uncertainty and the country risk  associated with Egypt have "dramatically increased and the situation  needs to be closely monitored to gauge whether the long-term risk  profile will change", the A.T. Kearny report said.
 
  UAE climbed to the 15th ranking, serving as a regional services hub.
 
  While many European countries were deeply affected by the financial  crisis, Estonia (11), Latvia (13) and Lithuania (14) saw their ratings  climb as a result because of what A.T. Kearney describes as "internal  devaluation", entailing wage reduction and expenditures and making  themselves leaner and more effective in terms of providing competitive  cost structures.
 
  The UK also benefited from a sharp decline in wages, and ascended to the 16th position from 31st in 2009.
 
  The United States is the top customer for outsourcing services,  accounting for 63 percent of global IT outsourcing spendings; its  so-called Tier II locations rank 18th as outsourcing locations, thanks  to a combination of talent and accessibility.
 
  Canada's cost advantage has, meanwhile, diminished and it has dropped in the rankings to 39th.
 
  GSLI purports to analyse and rank the top 50 countries worldwide for  locating outsourcing activities, including IT services and support,  contact centres and back-office support.
 
  Each country's score is composed of a weighted combination of relative  scores on 39 criteria which are categorised into three segments -  financial attractiveness, people and skills availability, and business  environment.
 
  A.T. Kearney maintains that in addition to economic changes, the nature of outsourcing itself is in transition.
 
  The old model involving multi-year contracts, custom code, and on-site  systems integration workers is beginning to give way to a new model in  which outsourcers provide standardised software solutions on a per-use  basis.
 
  The past two years have seen a number of outsourcers building and/or  acquiring the capabilities required to survive this shift, in the  opening salvo of a coming revolution in outsourcing, according to A.T.  Kearney.
 
  "Regardless of changes in the outsourcing industry business model and  other temporary setbacks, we believe the era of globalisation of  services production has only just begun," said Erik Peterson, managing  director of A.T. Kearney's Global Business Policy Council.
 
  "IT and BPO (business process outsourcing) offshoring are early  manifestations of a larger trend that, in the long run, means that more  functions can and will be considered for localization in countries  outside of which end-customers reside.
 
  "We have already witnessed a shift in the footprint of manufacturing  across the globe to a point where emerging markets have become  manufacturing powerhouses, and we can expect to see a dramatic shift in  the relative balance of service production among the developed and  emerging markets in the future," said Johan Gott, manager of research  for the Index.
 
  -- BERNAMA
Source: http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsbusiness.php?id=561631



