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Wipro zeros out its campus intake

4 min read
12:41UTC

Wipro's chief HR officer told reporters on 17 April the Indian IT services firm has no fresher hiring target for the year starting 1 April, after 7,500 fresher hires the prior year.

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Key takeaway

A major Indian IT firm zeroes its campus intake; no federal dataset captures the decision.

Wipro's chief human resources officer told reporters on 17 April that the Bengaluru-based IT services firm had set no fresher hiring target for FY27, its fiscal year beginning 1 April 2026 and ending 31 March 2027 1. The prior-year comparator was 7,500 fresher hires in FY26, making the FY27 jump to zero the specific reversal to note.

Total headcount drifted up by just 135 to 242,156, despite utilisation falling from 86.4% to 83.5% and attrition dropping to 13.8%. Wipro is losing fewer people at 13.8% attrition and refusing to replace the ones it does lose. A rising utilisation rate is the conventional argument for hiring; Wipro has inverted it by letting utilisation fall and still refusing to staff back up.

One bus stop away in Mumbai, Tata Consultancy Services ended FY26 with 584,519 employees, a net reduction of 23,460 across the year, and announced plans to hire 40,000 freshers in FY27 2. TCS and Wipro have taken contradictory bets on the same demographic. TCS is replacing experienced mid-layer delivery staff with cheaper graduates trained on AI-assisted workflows. Wipro, at the FY27 intake level, is skipping the graduate cohort entirely.

The same cohort of young Indian engineers, the people Oracle terminated by 6am email on 31 March , is being squeezed from both sides. Combined headcount across the Big-4 Indian tech-services firms, TCS, Infosys, Wipro and HCL Tech, has fallen by more than 42,000 over two years without a single announced mass-layoff event that would register in a Western dataset 3. The Stanford JOLTS hires-not-made channel documented the same mechanism for the United States at population scale. India runs the same channel at industrial scale and is visible only through the companies' own quarterly releases.

China's Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security took the opposite tack, recognising 42 new AI occupations and embedding transition into five-year state planning . Bangalore and Hyderabad are running the transition; Beijing is declaring it; Washington is still trying to count it. Wipro's FY27 target is the clearest single data point that the measurement gap now spans three continents.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Wipro is one of India's four biggest technology companies. It normally hires thousands of engineering graduates straight from university each year; in 2025-26, it hired 7,500. For 2026-27, it has set a hiring target of zero. This matters because India trains roughly 1.5 million engineers a year, many of whom expect to start careers at firms like Wipro. If multiple IT companies follow Wipro's lead, a large generation of Indian engineering graduates will find the traditional entry route into the industry closed off. The reason Wipro gives is AI: tools that automate the routine tasks freshers used to do. Whether that explanation is complete is disputed, but the effect on young engineers is the same regardless.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Wipro's zero fresher target has three structural causes operating simultaneously. First, utilisation at 83.5%, down from 86.4%, means existing staff are not fully occupied. Adding campus hires into an under-utilised bench carries a direct cost with no revenue offset.

Second, attrition has fallen to 13.8%, meaning the natural churn that previously created fresher replacement demand has slowed. When experienced staff stay longer, the pipeline that freshers traditionally fed into from below is already full.

Third, and most structurally, the Big-4 Indian IT model rests on a pyramid requiring a wide junior base to support a narrower senior layer. AI-assisted delivery compresses the junior tasks: data migration, test script writing, boilerplate code, the work freshers perform in their first two years. The base of the pyramid no longer needs to be as wide if machines perform the base-layer work.

India's National Education Policy 2020 committed to tripling the number of STEM graduates by 2030. Wipro's zero target arrives in the middle of that expansion, meaning the state is producing more graduates than the sector's largest firms are prepared to absorb.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    India's National Education Policy 2020 target of tripling STEM graduates by 2030 is on a collision course with IT sector absorption capacity; the Wipro zero target is the first data point from the Big-4 confirming the absorption gap is structural rather than cyclical.

    Medium term · 0.7
  • Risk

    If attrition recovers from its current 13.8% low back toward the 20%+ historical norm in FY28-29, Wipro will face a delivery gap after a year with zero freshers in the pipeline, as rebuilding the junior layer takes two to three years of campus hiring to produce useful delivery capacity.

    Long term · 0.62
  • Precedent

    Wipro's public announcement of a zero target removes the stigma of that number for competitors. Infosys and HCL Tech can now cite Wipro's disclosure when reporting below-historical intake without triggering exceptional analyst scrutiny.

    Short term · 0.75
First Reported In

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Business Today· 23 Apr 2026
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