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November 16, 2007

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Dinesh Goel

Absolutely Chris. These risks to pricing have become certainly more real as well significant in quantum of late. At the end of the day, my belief is the terms will reflect the hunger for the business by the service provider in a competitive situation since the principles of such adjustments are not hard to understand for either the buy or sell side. The bottomline is the pull of negotiations lever. Service providers will certainly price the risk in their pricing if client demands no adjustment to price on any of these counts.

Subir Dhar

Hi Chris,

I agree with your thoughts on the issue of continued decline of USD in the recent months, and the need to relook at pricing of contracts.

At the same time, one should also look at the behavioural aspects of the situation.

I have managed procurement contracts, and I always believed in helping out contractors/service providers who have responded positively to the needs of my organization during difficult periods, and built an atmosphere of mutual trust.

So if I were to analyze the situation of falling dollar - I would see how the service provider "behaved" when the dollar was continuously rising vis-a-vis the Indian Rupee. If the service provider was agreeable to passing on some of the benefits to client, I feel that the client should adopt a practical approach to consider the cause of the service provider.

On the issue of Inflation:
One good practice can be to have an understanding of the cost structure of the service providers and agreeing on the adjustments that will be made to the rates, and the basis (any Government Data).

One should note that the impact of wage inflation (linked to Consumer Price Index) should apply only to the labor component of the billing, and not to the total billing. Secondly, while the labor costs go up, the costs associated to technology (costs of desktops, telecom links etc) do come down.

Regards

Subir Dhar
Bangalore

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