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US HIRE Bill Proposal May Significantly Impact India's $280 Billion IT Services Sector

The proposed HIRE Bill in the US could impose a 25% tax on outsourcing, affecting India's IT services industry, which relies heavily on North American revenue. Analysts warn that this may raise costs for US companies and create uncertainty in the market.

The United States is considering a proposal that could significantly impact India's $280 billion IT services sector. The Halting International Relocation of Employment (HIRE) Bill, introduced by Ohio Republican Senator Bernie Moreno, aims to penalise outsourcing by imposing a hefty tax on payments made to foreign workers for services consumed in the US.

Indian IT giants like TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCLTech, and Tech Mahindra derive 50–65% of their revenue from North America. Global Capability Centres of Fortune 500 companies in banking, retail, healthcare, and tech also rely on India's skilled workforce. If enacted, the tax and loss of deductibility would inflate outsourcing costs.

US HIRE Bill Could Impact India's IT Sector

Potential Impact on Indian IT

Industry experts believe the bill faces significant hurdles in Congress. Ganesh Natarajan, Chairman of GTT Data Solutions & 5FWorld, told CNBC-TV18 that it is "very unlikely" the bill will pass in its current form because "every significant corporation in the Fortune 500 has huge investments in India." Arindam Sen of EY echoed this sentiment, noting that nearly 70% of US corporations would be affected.

The HIRE Bill includes three main provisions: a 25% outsourcing tax on payments to foreign entities for services benefiting American consumers; a ban on deductions for such expenses; and a Domestic Workforce Fund to support training and apprenticeships for American workers. While pitched as a job-protection measure, analysts warn it could sharply raise costs for US corporations reliant on Indian IT.

Political Context and Global Trade

The bill emerges amid increasing protectionist rhetoric in the US. Former Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro supports taxing remote foreign workers. MAGA-aligned activists have amplified calls to curb outsourcing to India. Senator Moreno positions the bill as a crackdown on "globalist executives" shipping American jobs overseas.

Currently, World Trade Organization (WTO) rules prevent duties on digital services. This moratorium was last renewed in early 2024 and will be reviewed in March 2026. India and other countries have previously pushed to end the ban so they can tax digital services, while the US has resisted. This broader debate adds another layer of complexity to the HIRE proposal.

Industry Reaction and Future Outlook

Nikhil Narendran from Trilegal mentioned that while similar proposals have surfaced before without materialising, "given the current scenario, it's very difficult to say one way or the other." The uncertainty itself could delay new deals and investments in India.

For now, most analysts agree that the HIRE Bill is unlikely to become law soon. However, its introduction reflects a rising tide of economic nationalism in the US that India's IT firms cannot ignore. Phil Fersht of HFS Research told Moneycontrol that the bigger challenge is the "uncertainty" such moves generate.

The bill may not pass in its current form but signals a serious policy threat. With heavy dependence on the US market, Indian IT firms may need to diversify their client base, invest more in Europe and Asia, and prepare for a less predictable geopolitical climate.

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