US HIRE Act Threat: How New Bill Could Disrupt India's $280B IT Engine

A new US bill called the HIRE Act could seriously impact India's massive IT industry. The legislation proposes a 25% tax on outsourcing payments to foreign providers. This would make offshore services much more expensive for American companies. Indian IT firms need to prepare for potential changes to their business model with the US market.

Key Points: US HIRE Act Targets Indian IT Outsourcing with 25% Tax

  • Bill imposes 25% excise tax on US payments to foreign service providers
  • Targets high-volume functions like application maintenance and customer support
  • Could force Indian firms to expand US staffing or accept lower margins
  • Even internal Global Capability Centers may not be exempt from tax provisions
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Proposed new US bill targets outsourcing, threatens India's IT engine: GTRI

New US bill proposes 25% tax on outsourcing payments, threatening India's $280B IT industry that earns 60% revenue from American market, warns GTRI analysis.

"A 25% tax surcharge combined with loss of deductibility could make offshore delivery meaningfully more expensive for US companies - GTRI Analysis"

New Delhi, November 14

A new US bill targeting outsourcing could sharply disrupt India's USD280-billion IT, BPO and Global Capability Centre (GCC) industry, which earns over 60 per cent of its revenue from the American market, the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) has warned.

According to a GTRI analysis, the "Halting International Relocation of Employment (HIRE) Act", introduced in the US Senate on September 5, 2025, proposes steep penalties for companies that offshore work. The bill, unrelated to the similarly named 2010 HIRE Act, seeks to impose a 25 per cent excise tax on payments made by US firms to any foreign service provider, including for work performed entirely outside the United States. It also aims to disallow tax deductibility for such payments.

"A 25 per cent tax surcharge combined with loss of deductibility could make offshore delivery meaningfully more expensive for US companies, prompting some to renegotiate contracts, rebalance delivery toward onshore or near-shore hubs, or slow down the pace of new outsourcing," noted GTRI analysis.

GTRI said these measures, if enacted from January 1, 2026, would raise the cost of outsourcing for American companies and could force renegotiation of contracts, increased onshore hiring, or a slowdown in new outsourcing deals. High-volume functions such as application maintenance, back-office operations and customer support could be hit the hardest. Even in-house GCCs of US multinationals operating from India may not be insulated, as the tax applies to any payment benefiting US consumers.

Indian technology firms may face pressure to expand local US staffing, accept lower margins or accelerate their shift toward higher-value digital, AI, cybersecurity and consulting services, the report noted. Uncertainty around the legislation may also affect new GCC investments in India.

GTRI noted, "High-volume functions such as application maintenance, customer support, and back-office processing are particularly vulnerable. Even GCCs--captive centres that serve US parent companies--may not be sheltered, as the proposed tax applies to any payment benefiting U.S. consumers, including internal cost allocations."

The bill, introduced by Senator Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio), remains at a preliminary stage, with no committee hearings or co-sponsors yet. Its passage is not guaranteed, as US technology and services companies are expected to lobby against provisions that could raise their operating costs. However, GTRI cautioned that the proposal signals growing political pushback in Washington against offshoring.

"India's IT sector must watch the bill's progress closely and prepare for a scenario where the US structurally rethinks its outsourcing policy," the report highlighted.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
American protectionism is nothing new, but this bill seems particularly harsh. The 25% tax plus loss of deductibility could really hurt our IT exports. Time for Indian companies to diversify beyond US markets.
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Sarah B
While I understand the need to protect American jobs, this seems counterproductive. The cost savings from outsourcing help US companies remain competitive globally. Hope cooler heads prevail in Washington.
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Arjun K
Maybe this is the push Indian IT needed to move up the value chain. We've been stuck in low-margin services for too long. Time to focus on AI, cybersecurity and digital transformation services where we can command better pricing 💪
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Michael C
As someone who works with Indian IT teams daily, I can say the quality and cost-effectiveness are unmatched. This bill would hurt American companies more than help them. The global economy works through specialization.
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Kavya N
Our IT industry has survived multiple challenges before - Y2K, 2008 crisis, visa issues. We'll adapt to this too. But honestly, our companies should have diversified geographically much earlier. Putting all eggs in one basket was risky.
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Vikram M
The bill is still in early stages and may not pass, but the sentiment is worrying. Indian IT supports millions of jobs directly and indirectly. We need strong diplomatic engagement to protect our

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