NASSCOM, India's IT industry body, reported the sector added roughly 140,000 staff in the 2026 financial year to reach about 5.9 million, naming JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Apple, Walmart and Shell among firms expanding Global Capability Centres (GCCs) in Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Pune. 1 Several of those firms are confirming AI-driven cuts at home in the same period. Entry-level IT hiring fell 20% to 25%, so the door into the industry is narrowing as the industry expands. 2
A GCC is an in-house offshore office, not an outsourcing contract, so when a multinational moves work to one it stays inside the same corporate entity. That distinction is the whole story. The job never appears as a US layoff cause and never shows up as an outsourcing deal either. Goldman Sachs has modelled AI substituting 25,000 US jobs a month while building these centres; JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon told investors the bank displaced staff through AI and is retraining them . The same headcount decision reads domestically as AI efficiency and offshore as capability investment.
The channel sits in a measurement blind spot by construction. A role moved from New York to Bengaluru triggers no WARN Act (Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification) filing, the US law requiring 60 days' notice of mass layoffs at a single site, and never enters the domestic-only JOLTS sample the data war turns on. Oracle already showed the gap, its US filings covering under 4% of its cuts .
The legacy outsourcers are squeezed from the other side. TCS posted its first modern revenue decline and Infosys shed 8,400 in a quarter , with Wipro setting a zero-fresher target for the year ahead . The firms that pioneered offshoring Western white-collar work are now losing it to the automation their clients are buying and to the in-house centres their clients are building.
