GENDER AND SKILLED MIGRATION: WOMEN IN THE INDIAN TECH SECTOR
Geography and You|Issue 138, 2019
Who goes abroad and why? the impact of going abroad for international assignments is usually gendered. While women make up nearly 35 per cent of the labour force in the Indian tech sector, a proportionally smaller group takes up international assignments. In this article, we draw on our findings to highlight who this group is, how the nature of work and migration is gendered and how it impacts women’s long-term career prospects within the Indian tech sector.
Gunjan Sondhi & Parvati Raghuram
GENDER AND SKILLED MIGRATION: WOMEN IN THE INDIAN TECH SECTOR

The increasing presence of women in historically male dominated computing labour market has made it a global success story. Even more worthy of applaud, as the Women and IT Scorecard—India 2018 (Raghuram et al. 2018) shows, is that the Indian tech sector has attained critical mass of women at 35 per cent of the total technical work force. By comparison, the UK has only 17 per cent women (The Chartered Institute for IT 2017), and the US only 25 per cent (Ashcraftet al. 2016), in its IT/Computing labour force. A majority of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries struggle to attract women to pursue higher education in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields, but Indian figures from the All India Survey of Higher Education (MHRD 2016) reveal that graduation from Information Technology (IT) and computing programmes is nearly gender balanced. However, gender equality masks the lack of diversity in social background, especially amongst women, who tend to come from more privileged backgrounds than men working in the sector (Sondhi et al. 2018). Drawing on this large talent pool, the Indian tech sector’s strategy of intense and targeted recruitment has led to attaining the critical mass of women within the national labour force.

How many are moving?

This story is from the Issue 138, 2019 edition of Geography and You.

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This story is from the Issue 138, 2019 edition of Geography and You.

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