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11/13/2020
Package of IT employee for 5 year experience | Salary breakup details | Fixed and Variable pay | CTC
Experience Letter sample for IT companies such as HCL Accenture IT Services L&T Technology Services Infosys Wipro Cognizant Mindtree Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Tech Mahindra Hexaware Technologies Delloite Mphasis 3i infotech capegemini broadcom first source VISPL Veritas ATOSGS Labs SAP Labs Amdocs KPIT Cummins Info systems IBN Technologies Limited Pieco Electronics & Electrical ( Philips ) Suma Soft Pvt Ltd.Software Technology Park of India (STPI) Veritas Software Corporation CTS Geometric Software Solutions Pvt. Ltd. Syntel Inc. Kanbay Inc. Xansa Citi corp Persistent TIAA Societe generale Honeywell Microland Microsoft Google Facebook Flipkart Cybage iGate KPIT Quest Global zensor UST global Cyient ramco system godrej infotech accel frontline Ford technology
Appointment Letter
Format of Hike Letter for IT companies such as HCL Accenture IT Services L&T Technology Services Infosys Wipro Cognizant Mindtree Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Tech Mahindra Hexaware Technologies Delloite Mphasis 3i infotech capegemini broadcom first source VISPL Veritas ATOSGS Labs SAP Labs Amdocs KPIT Cummins Info systems IBN Technologies Limited Pieco Electronics & Electrical ( Philips ) Suma Soft Pvt Ltd.Software Technology Park of India (STPI) Veritas Software Corporation CTS Geometric Software Solutions Pvt. Ltd. Syntel Inc. Kanbay Inc. Xansa Citi corp Persistent TIAA Societe generale Honeywell Microland Microsoft Google Facebook Flipkart Cybage iGate KPIT Quest Global zensor UST global Cyient ramco system godrej infotech accel frontline Ford technology
Format of Offer Letter for IT companies such as HCL Accenture IT Services L&T Technology Services Infosys Wipro Cognizant Mindtree Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Tech Mahindra Hexaware Technologies Delloite Mphasis 3i infotech capegemini broadcom first source VISPL Veritas ATOSGS Labs SAP Labs Amdocs KPIT Cummins Info systems IBN Technologies Limited Pieco Electronics & Electrical ( Philips ) Suma Soft Pvt Ltd.Software Technology Park of India (STPI) Veritas Software Corporation CTS Geometric Software Solutions Pvt. Ltd. Syntel Inc. Kanbay Inc. Xansa Citi corp Persistent TIAA Societe generale Honeywell Microland Microsoft Google Facebook Flipkart Cybage iGate KPIT Quest Global zensor UST global Cyient ramco system godrej infotech accel frontline Ford technology
Format of Payslip for IT companies such as HCL Accenture IT Services L&T Technology Services Infosys Wipro Cognizant Mindtree Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Tech Mahindra Hexaware Technologies Delloite Mphasis 3i infotech capegemini broadcom first source VISPL Veritas ATOSGS Labs SAP Labs Amdocs KPIT Cummins Info systems IBN Technologies Limited Pieco Electronics & Electrical ( Philips ) Suma Soft Pvt Ltd.Software Technology Park of India (STPI) Veritas Software Corporation CTS Geometric Software Solutions Pvt. Ltd. Syntel Inc. Kanbay Inc. Xansa Citi corp Persistent TIAA Societe generale Honeywell Microland Microsoft Google Facebook Flipkart Cybage iGate KPIT Quest Global zensor UST global Cyient ramco system godrej infotech accel frontline Ford technology
India to enter recession for first time ever and this continues for 2021
The RBI also flagged the risk of high inflation, which it said was showing ‘no signs of waning’.
India’s economy is likely to enter a recessionary phase for the first time ever in the second quarter (July-September) of the current financial year, with the Gross Domestic Product expected to contract by 8.6%, the Reserve Bank of India said in a bulletin released on Wednesday.
Technically, a country’s economy is said to hit recession when its GDP growth is negative for two consecutive quarters or more. India’s economy had contracted by an unprecedented 23.9% in the first quarter (April-June) of this financial year, after being hit by the coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent economic slowdown.In an article titled “State of the Economy”, the central bank in its bulletin, “nowcast” the contraction in the second quarter based on quarterly results declared by 887 non-financial listed companies, whose sales remained in contraction in the second quarter. “Nowcasting” is the prediction of the present or the very near future of the state of the economy.
The RBI, however, noted that the contraction is “ebbing with gradual normalisation in activities and expected to be short-lived”. The central bank cited improvement in indicators like aggregate demand, Goods and Services Tax collection and manufacturing activities to suggest that the economy is picking up pace.
The RBI also said that the National Statistical Office will formally announce the GDP numbers for the second quarter in end-November.
Inflation to remain high
Besides the contraction in economy, the central bank also flagged the downside risk of high inflation in the coming months.
The foremost [risk] is the unrelenting pressure of inflation, with no signs of waning in spite of supply management measures,” the RBI observed. It said that the inflation levels may result in “a loss of credibility in policy interventions”, taking a toll on the “nascent growth impulses”.
Retail inflation in September rose to 7.34%, the highest since January, and well above the RBI’s mandated range of 2% to 6%. The inflation numbers for October are expected to be released on Thursday.
Apart from the price rise scare, the RBI flagged two more concerns, that of a second wave of the virus and a “stress intensifying among households and corporations that has been delayed but not mitigated”. The central bank said that a second wave of Covid-19 can have an effect on collapsing external demand, while the stress in households and corporations ran a risk of spilling over to the financial sector.
Source:- https://scroll.in/latest/978322/india-to-enter-recession-first-time-ever-as-gdp-likely-to-shrink-by-8-6-in-second-quarter-says-rbi
India entered into a recession - Job loss will happen
India has technically entered into a recession with a likely contraction in its GDP during the July-September period, according to a report by the Reserve Bank of India (
RBI's Economic Activity Index estimates that India's GDP growth for the second quarter of the current financial year was negative and the GDP contracted by 8.6 per cent during the quarter.
"India has entered into a
The RBI report said that at a time when global economic activity is besieged by the outbreak of the second wave of Covid-19, incoming data for the month of October 2020 have brightened the near-term outlook for the
"Since the assessment of the performance of the Indian economy in the first half of 2020-21 that was presented in the Monetary Policy Report of October 2020, several developments point to a window of respite opening up and an unshackling of economic activity from the grip of Covid-19 as the festival season sets in," it said.
India Recession 2020 - IT companies will get impact
In its latest monthly bulletin — for November — the Reserve Bank of India has dedicated a chapter on the “State of the economy”. The idea is to provide a monthly snapshot of some of the key indicators of India’s economic health. “By doing so, a hallowed tradition that began with the first issue of the Bulletin in January 1947, but interrupted during the period 1995 to date, will be revived,” the bulletin said.
As part of the exercise, the RBI has started “nowcasting” or “the prediction of the present or the very near future of the state of the economy”. And the very first “nowcast” predicts that India’s economy will contract by 8.6% in the second quarter (July, August, September) of the current financial year.
While this pace of contraction is considerably slower than the 23.9% decline in the real gross domestic product (GDP) during the first quarter (April, May, June), the contraction of Q2 is crucial because it implies India that has entered a “technical recession” in the first half of 2020-21— for the first time in its history.
To better understand the term “technical recession”, one must distinguish it from two other phrases — a recession and a recessionary phase of an economy.
What is a recessionary phase?
At its simplest, in any economy, a recessionary phase is the counterpart of an expansionary phase. In other words, when the overall output of goods and services — typically measured by the GDP — increases from one quarter (or month) to another, the economy is said to be in an expansionary phase. And when the GDP contracts from one quarter to another, the economy is said to be in a recessionary phase.
Together, these two phases create what is called a “business cycle” in any economy. A full business cycle could last anywhere between one year and a decade.
The line graph accompanying this article maps India’s quarterly real GDP growth since 1951. As one can see, this line goes up and down. The peaks and troughs show the different expansionary and recessionary phases of the economy.
Technical recession, India recession, India economy, RBI on India economy, What is technical recession, Technical recession explained * RBI estimates : Source: Trading Economics
As the graph shows, there have been several expansionary and recessionary phases in India’s history.
How is a recession different?
“When a recessionary phase sustains for long enough, it is called a recession. In other words, when the GDP contracts for a long enough period, the economy is said to be in a recession.”
There is, however, no universally accepted definition of a recession — as in, for how long should the GDP contract before an economy is said to be in a recession. But most economists agree with the definition that the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) in the United States uses. According to NBER, “During a recession, a significant decline in economic activity spreads across the economy and can last from a few months to more than a year”.
The NBER’s Business Cycle Dating Committee typically looks at various variables — employment, consumption etc — apart from GDP growth to arrive at a decision. It also looks at the “depth, diffusion, and duration” of decline in economic activity to determine whether an economy is in a recession or not.
For example, in the case of the most recent dip in economic activity in the US, which started in February 2020 as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, the drop in activity has been so great and so widely diffused throughout the economy that the downturn would have been classified as a recession even if it had proved to be quite brief.
Then, what is a technical recession?
While the basic idea behind the term “recession” — significant contraction in economic activity — is clear, from the perspective of empirical data analysis, there are too many unanswered queries.
For instance, would quarterly GDP be enough to determine economic activity? Or should one look at unemployment or personal consumption as well? It is entirely possible that GDP starts growing after a while but unemployment levels do not fall adequately.
During the 2008 global financial crisis, NBER pegged June 2009 as the end date for the recession but some metrics did not recover for much longer. For instance, “non-farm payroll employment, did not exceed the level of the previous peak until April 2014,” according to NBER.
To get around these empirical technicalities, commentators often consider a recession to be in progress when real GDP has declined for at least two consecutive quarters.
That is how real quarterly GDP has come to be accepted as a measure of economic activity and a “benchmark” for ascertaining a “technical recession”. By this definition, as the data in the table shows, India entered a recession at the end of September. The UK is in its third quarter of recession. Brazil and Indonesia are also in recession while South Africa has evaded it until now, but only marginally. China, where the pandemic began, has bucked the trend.
Was India’s technical recession unexpected?
No. Given the nature of the problem — the pandemic — as soon as the lockdown was announced in March, most economists expected the Indian economy to go into recession. In fact, most estimates expect the economy to contract for at least one more quarter — that is October to December, currently under way.
Typically, recessions last for a few quarters. If they continue for years, they are referred to as “depressions”. But a depression is quite rare; the last one was during the 1930s in the US.
In the current scenario, the key determinant for any economy to come out of recession is to control the spread of Covid-19.
In India’s case, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has expressed hope that India’s recession could be already over and that the economy may register positive growth in the current quarter.
Source : https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/what-is-a-technical-recession-indian-economy-coronavirus-7049758/
4/28/2015
Wipro working experience - Prons and Cons
Wipro spends a significant amount of money on employee training and enhancing technical as well as managerial skills.
All wipro Policies(Medical, travel etc reimbursemnt) are very clear and helpful.
Wipro is a good company for freshers and managers to work and it is world leading IT MNC
1/08/2013
Top 20 IT Companies in India
Fiscal Cliff bill explained | Impact on India | Outsourcing - IT recession 2013 | Warning on Investor
12/08/2012
Wipro's Location all over the world - Asia Pacific | Middle East | Africa | Europe | South America | North America
Middle East
Saudi Arabia
Wipro Arabia Limited
Jarir building, P O Box 31349,
Al Khobar 31952
Phone: +966 (3) 898 4015
Fax: +966 (3) 898 6005
Wipro Arabia Limited
Sulaimania 30th Street, P O Box 250767,
Riyadh 11391
Phone: +966 (1) 239 2199
Fax: +966 (1) 461 2323
Wipro Arabia Limited
Palestine Street Al Makhronah Intersection, P O Box 23335,
Jeddah 6483
Phone: +966 (2) 676 0252
Fax: +966 (2) 676 0191
Africa
Egypt
Wipro Information Technology (Egypt) SAE
Cairo-Alex Desert Road,
Giza, Egypt
Phone: +20-111122111
Fax: +20-2-35370355
Wipro Location in India - Bangalore | Hyderabad | Secunderabad | Chennai | Pune | Mumbai | Kolkata | New Delhi | Noida | Gurgaon | Cochin
India
Corporate office
Doddakannelli, Sarjapur Road,
Bangalore - 560 035
Fax: +91 (80) 28440256
E-mail: reachus@wipro.com
South 1
Wipro Limited
SB Towers,
Bangalore - 560 001
Phone: +91 (80) 25588422, 25588613
Fax: +91 (80) 25596731, 25587984
Wipro Limited
Koramangala I Block,
Bangalore - 560 034
Phone: +91 (80) 25530035
Fax: +91 (80) 25530086
Wipro Limited
Creator 4th Floor,
Whitefield Road,
Bangalore - 560 066
Phone: +91 (80) 28411990
Fax: +91 (80) 28411988,
28411989
Wipro Limited
Bommanahalli,
Hosur Main Road,
Bangalore - 560 068
Phone: +91 (80) 5722296/93
Fax:+91(80)25711073, 25722073, 25722685,
25722696
Wipro Limited
53/1, Hosur Main Road,
Madivalla,
Bangalore - 560 068
Phone: +91 (80) 25502001
Wipro Limited
Hosur Road,
Bangalore - 560 100
Phone: +91 (80) 28520408, 28520416
Wipro Limited
Madivala Hosur Road,
Bangalore - 560 068
Phone: +91 (80) 25539134 - 39
Fax: +91 (80) 25539701, 25539702
Wipro Limited
Manikonda, Gachibowli,
Hyderabad 500 032
Phone: +91 40 30797990
Fax: +91 40 30797070
Wipro Limited
Sy No 64, Serillingampalli,Hyderabad
Phone: 040 - 30797979
Fax: +91 (40) 23110042, 23110043
Wipro Limited
S P Road, Begumpet,
Secunderabad - 500 016
Phone: 040 - 30797979
Fax: +91 (40) 27896123
South 2
Wipro Limited
Guindy,
Chennai - 600 032
Phone: +91 (44) 2301530,
Fax: +91 (44) 2301532, 2301397
Wipro Limited/ Wipro BPO
Sholinganallur,
Chennai - 600 119
Phone: +91 (44) 24500200
Fax: +91(44) 24500240, 24500250
West
Wipro Limited/Wipro BPO
Pune Infotech Park,
Hinjewadi
Pune - 411 057
Phone: +91 (20) 22933700, 22933750
Fax: +91 (20) 22933756
Wipro BPO
Spectra Building,
Hiranandani Gardens Powai
Mumbai - 400076
Phone: +91 (22) 30924747
Fax: +91 (22) 30924848
Wipro BPO
Belapur Railway Station Complex,
Navi Mumbai - 400 614
Phone: +91 (22) 30954747
East
Wipro Limited
Sector - V, Salt Lake,
Kolkata - 700091
Phone: +91 (33) 2367,
3424/25/26/ 27
Fax: +91 (33) 2367 3425
North
Wipro BPO
A-23,
Mohan Co-operative Industrial Area,
Mathura Road,
New Delhi - 110044
Phone: +91 (11) - 33785100
Fax: +91 (11) - 33785200
Wipro BPO
Omaxe square,
Commercial plot No.-14,
Office block, Jasola,
New Delhi - 110025
Phone: +91 (11) - 33697100
Fax: +91 (11) - 33697200
Wipro BPO
Plot no A1 - Sec 3,
Noida,
Uttar Pradesh - 201301
Phone: +91 (120) - 3893500
Wipro Limited
Udyog Vihar, Phase - III Gurgaon - 122016
Phone: +91 (124) 308 4000
Fax: +91 (124) 308 4001















