Search
      Channels
  News
  Home Loans
  Commercial Loans
  Insurance
  Credit Cards
  Calculators
  NRI Center
     Investment
  Mutual Funds
  Stock Research
  Market Tools
  Special Reports
  Fund Focus
  Company Focus
  Sector Focus
  Interviews
     Services
  Greetings
  Message Board
Partners
Home -> Finance -> Full Story
BT workers resist opening call centre in India
Thursday, February 20 2003 18:43 Hrs (IST)

London: Leading Telecom group in UK British Telecom (BT) is facing stiff resistance from its union over a move to open a call centre in India to manage its directory inquiry services.

While BT said it would not be closing any existing call centres in Britain and that any job losses would come from the high levels of "natural wastage" in the call centre industry, the Communication Workers' Union (CWU) said BT was planning to transfer 700 jobs to India.

The union said it had written to 3,500 BT workers urging them to resist the move "by all means possible".

"We would stress that whatever decision is reached we would not destroy BT jobs in the UK, only to recreate them in India," a company spokesman said.

If BT plans go ahead it will become the latest in a group of companies to take advantage of India's cheaper employment costs.

This month, Aviva, Britain's largest insurer, announced that it would shift 1,000 back-office jobs to India by the end of the year. Other companies to have already made the move include HSBC and Prudential.

BT, which has suffered from flat revenue growth, said that the company was considering whether or not to establish call centres in India. However, "a final decision is yet to be taken", the spokesman said.

BT has about 2,500 staff in Britain, many of them on temporary contracts who handle hundreds of millions of calls made to its directory inquiries service every year.

PTI





Sponsored Links

WQN    Call India for 23 c/m