{"id":113409,"date":"2021-05-02T22:48:18","date_gmt":"2021-05-02T22:48:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=113409"},"modified":"2021-05-02T22:48:18","modified_gmt":"2021-05-02T22:48:18","slug":"singapore-firms-with-india-operations-tackling-business-survival-employees-well-being","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/economy\/singapore-firms-with-india-operations-tackling-business-survival-employees-well-being\/","title":{"rendered":"Singapore firms with India operations tackling business survival, employees' well-being"},"content":{"rendered":"
SINGAPORE – A Singapore software solutions company that has the bulk of its key staff in India is beefing up recruitment to ensure it has enough manpower in case the South Asian country’s surging infection rate hits its workforce.<\/p>\n
Napier Healthcare employs around 500 Indian workers who are usually based in Hyderabad or Bangalore but have been working from home since last year. It has only one to two Singaporeans working there for short periods on occasion.<\/p>\n
India’s devastating second wave of Covid-19 infections has overrun its healthcare system, with countries including Singapore and the United States sending aid in the form of oxygen cylinders and diagnostic supplies.<\/p>\n
Napier Healthcare is among an estimated 500 to 650 Singapore firms with operations in India that have had to deal with two main challenges – ensuring their commercial survival as well as employee well-being.<\/p>\n
Most Singaporean staff based in India have returned home over the past year, noted chamber of commerce representatives and company officials.<\/p>\n
Napier Healthcare chief executive officer Karthik Tirupathi, who used to travel to India about once or twice a quarter before the pandemic, said about 10 per cent of its workforce in India had been infected with Covid-19.<\/p>\n
But while employees were usually unwell for about five to six days before they could be back at work in the first wave of infections, they are now out for longer periods during this second wave. “Now, when people are sick, it could be two to three weeks and they’re still not fully recovered. In the past, they would isolate and it would just be them who fell ill, but now it usually spreads to their entire family as well,” Mr Tirupathi said, noting that this has been the case since March.<\/p>\n
Time is of the essence when it comes to making decisions on business continuity, such as the choice to hire more staff than the firm needs, he added. “If we stop to think what makes sense commercially and what does not, it would be too late.”<\/p>\n
Digital consultancy SK Deep Tech, which intended to start online courses for engineering students in India last month, has put its plans on hold, given the virus surge.<\/p>\n
Its director Kishore Kommareddi added that with the virus situation constantly evolving and cases surging, projects have been at a standstill, and there is no expectation of improvement until August.<\/p>\n
Mr Vinesh Natali, global head and director of engineering consultant Meinhardt EPCM Group, said some of its clients’ infrastructure projects are being affected by the movement controls and supply of materials and manpower. These are starting to impact cycle times.<\/p>\n
Meinhardt EPCM has been working with partners to identify supplies of oxygen tanks for the communities where it works, he added.<\/p>\n