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US HIRE Bill Threatens $100 Billion Indian IT Exports: Here’s What It Means for the Sector

The US HIRE Bill threatens $100 billion Indian IT exports by imposing a 25% outsourcing tax. Learn its impact on India’s IT sector and global tech industry.

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US HIRE Bill Threatens $100 Billion Indian IT Exports: Here’s What It Means for the Sector

NEW DELHI: The United States is turning its attention from Indian goods exports to services, with a new legislative proposal that could dramatically affect India’s booming IT sector. The “Halting International Relocation of Employment Act” (HIRE Act), introduced in the Senate by Senator Bernie Moreno, proposes a 25% tax on certain payments US taxpayers make to foreign service providers.

What the HIRE Act Aims to Do

Senator Moreno argues that while college graduates in America struggle to find jobs, many corporations have been outsourcing high-paying jobs abroad. He said:

“If companies want to hire foreign workers instead of Americans, my bill will hit them where it hurts: their pocketbooks.”

The bill is designed to protect the working-class Americans by making outsourcing costly and encouraging domestic employment.

This move, if enacted, could make Indian IT services exports to the US significantly more expensive. Considering that the US accounts for over 50% of India’s software services exports, which totaled around $225 billion in 2024–25, the implications are substantial.

Even before the HIRE Act, voices calling for tariffs on outsourced labor were gaining traction. Far-right commentator Jack Posobiec suggested:

“Tariff the foreign remote workers. All outsourcing should be tariffed. Countries must pay for the privilege of providing services remotely to the US, the same way as goods.”

This sentiment reflects a broader push in the US to bring jobs back home.

Key Provisions of the HIRE Act

The HIRE Act introduces the concept of “outsourcing payments”, which includes any premium, fee, royalty, or service charge paid to a foreign person for services benefiting US consumers. Key highlights include:

Why the HIRE Act Matters for US-India Tech

The US is the largest market for Indian IT services and global capability centers. A 25% excise tax plus denial of deductions could raise the effective cost of offshore services to nearly 46%, significantly impacting US buyers. The bill’s scope likely covers all foreign service providers—including large vendors, captive centers, affiliates, contractors, and freelancers—if their work benefits US consumers, even indirectly. Anti-avoidance rules and Treasury guidance will determine the full reach.

Changes if the HIRE Act Becomes Law

  1. Price and Margin Impact: US buyers may renegotiate rates, shift work onshore/nearshore, or rebalance non-US work, potentially compressing Indian providers’ margins.
  2. Contract & Compliance Overhead: Companies will need detailed scoping, time-tracking, and documentation to define “consumer benefit” and justify apportionment.
  3. GCC Strategy Shifts: Multinationals may reroute charges, expand US hubs, or insource critical roles; anti-avoidance rules prevent simple entity reshuffles.
  4. AI and Automation: Enterprises may accelerate automation of support, QA, and back-office processes to offset higher labor costs.
  5. Political & Trade Friction: Indian IT exports could face lobbying for exemptions or clarifications, amid broader US political pressure to curb offshoring.

Sector-by-Sector Impact (US-India Perspective)

What Companies Should Do

Domestic Workforce Fund

The HIRE Act also proposes the creation of a Domestic Workforce Fund, financed through the outsourcing tax and related penalties. Funds would be used exclusively for:

The bill is set to take effect for payments made after December 31, 2025.

The HIRE Act is designed to favor domestic hiring. If enacted, US buyers would face higher costs for offshore work, and Indian IT and BPM providers may need a strategic reset. The ultimate impact depends on Congress, Treasury guidance, and enforcement of anti-avoidance rules.

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