Sunday 20 March 2016

Chambers Tells India Cisco's Got Another US$100 Million to Spend

Cisco and India continue their love-incon Borg's announcement of an investment of $ 100 million for the country in the next 18 months to two years.

Cisco already employs about 10,000 employees in India and in February the company discussed plans to establish a manufacturing base in Pune.

As part of the coast, announced last Friday, the company plans to form a quarter of a million students in 2020.

There is also $ 40 million to begin at an early stage, the report said.

The statement Cisco said the announcement was "made in the presence" of CEO John Chambers, with executives from Irving Tang (Chairman of the Asia-Pacific and Japan) and Dinesh Malkani (President of regions in India and SAARC).

The initiatives also include six laboratories provided innovative, three centers of specialization (disciplines Borg has in mind is not identified), and funded academic collaborations.

Times of India reports Economic Chambers said the economy is booming "because of the digital economy."
The conference to announce the investment gave the local media the opportunity to question Chambers on current visa dispute between India and the United States.

India went to the World Trade Organization to complain about the costs of new duplicate of America on H-1B visas, which the IT sector in India uses a lot of lead workers to America.

Chambers has said that the technology industry in the United States has failed to explain to the public why the H-1B visas are a good thing, leading to a perception that they are victims of violence to suppress local wages.

To the public of India, he was conciliatory, accusing the environment "emotional" of an electoral campaign in December to change the visa regime - especially in the context of the US economy, in which the middle class " has the economic assessment of the last 15 years has not seen. "

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