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South Africa Emerging as a Credible Alternative Offshore Destination
December 11, 2008
SOUTH
AFRICA EMERGING AS A CREDIBLE ALTERNATIVE OFFSHORE
DESTINATION, SAYS EVEREST
Study done on behalf of the South African government and
BPO industry shows narrowing of savings gap with other low-cost offshore
destinations like India
Large entry-level English-speaking talent pool
(~470,000 annually), besides sizeable niche skills in financial sector; has
about 4 times the number of actuaries in India
Gurgaon, December 11,
2008:Everest Group has released the findings of its latest and most
comprehensive study on South Africa’s
BPO industry, titled “Ready to compete: South Africa’s BPO capabilities in
the Financial Services sector”. Everest conducted this study with Letsema
Consulting on behalf of a South African government and industry partnership, which
comprised of “the dti”, Business Trust and BPeSA (BPO industry association). This
report provides a comprehensive fact-based view of South Africa’s current BPO
capabilities and its growth potential in the Financial Services (FS) sector.
Says Brian Whittaker, CEO of South Africa-based Business
Trust, “BPO is one of the priority sectors for growth in South Africa.
Our target is to achieve 100,000 direct and indirect jobs by 2009; and we have already
made significant progress. Various public and private sector initiatives have
been put in place to attract more offshore BPO jobs to South Africa.
This report provides potential investors with a level of fine-grained
information to support the business case for investing in Financial Services (FS)
BPO in South Africa”.
Elaborating
on the findings of the study, Nikhil Rajpal,
Principal, Everest Group, adds, “South Africa presents a significant
opportunity for global Financial Services firms looking to expand their
offshore footprint. It offers a 50-60% operating cost savings
potential over western markets. Further, we observed that the savings
gap between Johannesburg and a low-cost offshore destination like
Bangalore has decreased from 30% in 2005 to 15% in 2008 and could further decrease to just 8% in 2012. One
of the reasons is that while most other currencies have appreciated on average over
the last 3 years, the South African currency has depreciated. Also, inflation
levels in South Africa are
lower than other low-cost destinations like India
and Philippines.
If we take into account the impact of lower attrition in South Africa, the
savings gap is even lower.” There are eight established delivery locations in South Africa, with the key ones being Johannesburg,
Cape Town and Durban, he said.
South Africa presents a
significant potential for growth driven by various factors including a large
experienced talent pool with service delivery and domain skills in the domestic
FS industry; sizeable pool with specialized skills; narrowing of savings gap;
and, availability of scalable, high quality English skills, at a low cost.
The study further shows that the FS-focused
BPO industry in South
Africa has established significant scale
with ~11,000
employees in service providers (includes suppliers and offshore captives).
This scale is comparable or larger than several other emerging global sourcing
destinations like Jamaica (2-3k),
Romania (5-7k), CzechRepublic
(7-10k), Malaysia (13-15k)
and Argentina
(20-25k). The study shows that the service provider industry in South Africa has
established credible delivery across FS sub-verticals (retail banking,
insurance, asset management) and across BPO functions (front and back-office).
The industry is delivering robust cost benefits and is meeting client quality
and service level expectations. Further, it is evolving to deliver additional
benefits beyond labor arbitrage. In addition to the service providers, South Africa has
65,000-75,000
employees in domestic captives of South African FS companies.
SaysH.Karthik , Research Director, Everest
Research Institute,
“FS BPO service providers in South
Africa have credible delivery maturity. As
many as 240 FS clients are currently being served. While front-office
remains a key strength with about 6,000 employees across inbound and outbound
functions, significant back-office activity also exists, with about 5000
employees. Almost 75% of outsource-able FS back-office processes are currently being
supported. There are early successes in offshore delivery of complex
back-office processes, such as actuarial modeling and investment management”