The call to “bring jobs back to America” is echoing once again in Washington, this time with India in focus.
What began as a campaign refrain has now entered policy deliberations within President Donald Trump’s administration and among his supporters, raising the prospect of new limits on cross-border IT services.
Republican senator from Ohio, Bernie Moreno, has introduced the Halting International Relocation of Employment Act (HIRE Act).
The bill seeks to impose a 25% tax on payments made by American companies to foreign firms for services provided to US customers, mainly targeting outsourcing.
It also blocks such transactions from being tax-deductible, requires companies to report them to the government, and directs the tax proceeds into job training and workforce programs in the United States.
If passed, the measure would apply to payments made after December 31, 2025.
Right-wing commentator Laura Loomer, reportedly a close aide to President Donald Trump, claimed on X that “the President is now considering blocking US IT companies from outsourcing their work to Indian companies.”
She added: “In other words, you don’t need to ‘press 2’ for English anymore. Make Call Centers American Again!”
The scale
For Indian outsourcing firms, which have spent decades building a $100 billion export industry around US clients, the signals are troubling, especially at a time when they are already grappling with disruption from artificial intelligence and muted growth.
Most large IT companies have been reporting only single-digit revenue increases.
India’s IT and IT-enabled services industry is valued at more than $250 billion annually, with about $200 billion generated from exports. Software services exports alone stood at $190.7 billion in FY 2023–24, according to the Reserve Bank of India’s annual survey on software and IT-enabled services exports.
The United States remains the largest client market, accounting for around 54% of India’s software services exports, over $100 billion a year in outsourcing revenue flowing from India to the US.
The impact
Any move to restrict outsourcing would weigh heavily not just on corporate earnings in Bengaluru and Hyderabad, but also on the livelihoods of millions of Indian technology professionals.
The debate is being closely tracked by both the Union and the state governments. Policymakers have long been criticised for failing to secure lasting visa concessions in the critical H-1B category despite years of lobbying.
Unearthinsight founder and CEO Gaurav Vasu noted that if the HIRE Act is enacted, the first companies to be hit would be US enterprises across sectors that depend heavily on outsourcing, including Cisco, American Express, Ford, General Electric, JPMorgan, Citi, BlackRock, American Airlines, Walmart, and McDonald’s.
US corporations have long relied on outsourcing to low-cost destinations such as India, Mexico, the Philippines, and Poland, he observed. Forcing them to insource operations could significantly raise costs, hurting profitability and stock market performance. UnearthInsight estimates that insourcing could increase enterprise costs and reduce margins by 1–2%.
“The ripple effect of such a policy will extend to the global outsourcing industry, with India bearing a substantial impact,” Vasu said. “This will slow down the growth of the close to $300 billion Indian technology sector, including IT services, Global Capability Centers, and adjacent industries directly or indirectly connected to outsourcing.”
Vasu and another analyst said companies would need to adopt a wait-and-watch approach.
Stating that it is too early to comment, Karnataka information technology (IT) minister Priyank Kharge said the potential US tariffs on Indian IT services are unlikely to disrupt the country’s $280-billion export sector.
Speaking at the launch of the Karnataka Mid-Market GCC Report and the KATALYST GCC Handbook on Tuesday, he highlighted the country’s strong offshore delivery model and the global reliance on its technology talent.
Diversification a key?
Saurabh Gupta, president of research and advisory firm HFS Research, said that unlike past downturns driven by economic cycles, this crisis is man-made, with repercussions not only for Indian IT providers, but also for US enterprises that are already struggling with rising costs from tariffs.
“Any restrictions on outsourcing and broader IT services would squeeze both supply and demand sides, making delivery more expensive and less predictable,” he said.
Indian IT companies now face the challenge of diversifying markets, innovating service models, and strengthening domestic growth to cushion against tighter trade barriers.
Vasu noted that Indian IT firms are already relatively diversified, with 30–40% of revenues coming from non-US markets, where growth has been strongest. Non-US segments have been expanding at 8–12% annually.
“HCLTech saw 8.2% year-on-year growth in its ‘rest of the world’ market, Coforge 12.6%, and LTTS 26%. TCS, too, reported 10% growth in the MEA region during Q1 FY26,” he said.
“The demand environment outside the US has remained resilient, with Europe in particular driving high growth last quarter. Beyond Europe, Asia Pacific and EMEA are emerging as attractive markets, boosted by modernisation and digital transformation needs.”
A senior manager at a Big Four firm in Bengaluru, seeking anonymity, said the potential blocking of outsourced jobs could disrupt established service delivery processes, sharply raise costs for US enterprises, and dent India’s critical role in healthcare billing.
“This would have ripple effects on both nations’ economies and the healthcare sector in particular, which relies on efficient offshore billing operations,” he said, adding that he was apprehensive about his own job given his work for the US healthcare industry.
In a LinkedIn post, Accenture’s global lead for GCC Transformation & Reinvention, Sridhar M said he has been working with clients across the globe on deep tech and innovation projects.
“Today’s technology breakthroughs happen when the best minds collaborate across borders. Disrupting this interconnected ecosystem through policy interventions could mean higher costs that slow down R&D investments, reduced innovation speed when projects can’t access the right talent, and critical skill gaps that impact competitiveness,” he wrote.
Rather than viewing this as countries competing against each other, he noted, the focus should be on creating partnerships where everyone wins—local job creation and global innovation working hand in hand.
Nasscom declined to comment on AIM’s queries.
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