Inflation drives global firms eastward in Europe in search of cost
savings
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[October 18, 2022] By
Michael Kahn and Anna Koper
PRAGUE/WARSAW (Reuters) - Central European
companies that provide remote, lower-cost business services for
multinationals are ramping up their expansion plans as high inflation
drives global firms to push more work to the region to cut costs and
bolster margins.
From Prague and Warsaw to Budapest, western companies have long looked
to tap a deep pool of educated, multinational workers for outsourced or
offshored business services such as software development,
administration, payroll handling and research for big European and U.S.
customers.
Now, despite a narrowing wage gap and costs rising faster than in
western Europe, central Europe's business service centres that
flourished during the pandemic are taking on more staff as other sectors
such as manufacturers pull back due to the war in Ukraine and soaring
energy costs.
Take Silicon Valley-based Pure Storage. The flash-data hardware and
software developer said in September it was doubling the number of
engineers at its Prague centre and plans to double them again in 2023
and again in 2024, Paul Melmon, the head of the Czech centre, told
Reuters.
"It is more cost effective to hire an engineer in Prague than Mountain
View even with inflation," said Melmon, who said a diversified workforce
represented one of the attractions of Prague where Pure Storage employs
a few hundred workers.
"If we started out here as an experiment, the experiment is working."
INFLATION ATTRACTS NEW INVESTORS
The business services sector has grown from almost nothing 25 years ago
to an industry employing nearly 800,000 workers across Central and
Eastern Europe, an increasingly important engine for local economies.
A survey from the Czech Association of Business Service Leaders, the
industry group representing the sector, pegs employment growth at 11% in
2022 and 13% in 2023.
"With rising inflation in the West this region is seeing more investors
coming in to set up centres and new types of services," said Jonathan
Appleton, managing director of ABSL Czech Republic.
The wage gap has narrowed in recent years as economic growth in
countries like Poland and the Czech Republic outpace that of Western
nations. But employment costs in the region still range from around 30%
to as much as 50% lower depending on the role, companies and experts
say.
The ability to provide remote work fuelled the sector during the
pandemic, and now soaring inflation in big markets like Britain, Germany
and France once again plays to the region's strengths.
"There is new investment coming in because shared business service
centres offer a way to drive more cost savings back home for the group
when there is inflation and market pressure," said Adam Jamiol, a
partner at PwC based in Krakow.
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An employee weighs vegetables in a
supermarket in Nice, France, August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
In Poland – which employs more than 400,000 people in business
services – the sector is expected to reach an annual growth rate of
nearly 8% by the end of the first quarter of 2023 despite
double-digit wage growth since February, inflation running at 17.2%
and war in neighbouring Ukraine.
Czech inflation stands at 18%, also above the euro zone average that
zoomed past forecasts to reach 10.0% in September, a new record high
driven by food and energy prices that underlines the incentive for
companies to cut costs.
"Strong wage pressure with wage increases in markets like Germany
and France raise the cost of labour to such levels at which it is
difficult to be efficient," Lukasz Gebski, chief executive of call
centre operator Teleperformance Polska told Reuters.
"In Poland, we have a lot of young people who learn, study and know
foreign languages, therefore the growth potential is large and it is
driven also by high inflation in the West..."
CEE OUTPACES OTHER GLOBAL CENTRES
Other global outsourcing regions have started to struggle. In India,
IT exporters such as TCS, Wipro and Infosys -- which form the bulk
of the country’s business services sector -- have faced squeezed
margins over the past few quarters as they try to retain employees
amid a higher sector-wide talent churn.
But in central Europe where Czech GDP is forecast at 2.3% in 2022
before slowing to 1.1% in 2023 and the Polish economy is expected to
slow from 4.7% in 2022 to 1.4% in 2023, shared business services
providers offer an economic bright spot.
At Comdata, whose 1,500 workers in the Czech Republic and Hungary
operate telephone service lines, rising inflation and costs from
Western companies have kept business humming. The company plans to
boost its rolls by around 300 employees in 2022 and 2023, said the
group’s regional chief Jan Nedelnik.
"As more and more companies try to cut and to lower the labour costs
they will be moving the services from western Europe,” Nedelnik told
Reuters.
"I see during the last two or three months the tenders are rapidly
growing for German, French, Spanish and English-speaking roles. This
trend will continue."
(Additional reporting by Munsif Vengattil in Bangalore, Editing by
Mark John and Hugh Lawson)
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