U.S. law firms to source from India

By agencies   |   Friday, 02 September 2005, 19:30 IST   |    1 Comments
Printer Print Email Email
NEW DELHI: High-end legal services are likely to lead the next wave of offshoring with about 35,000 lawyers’ jobs likely to move from the U.S. to countries like India by 2010. In its latest study, prepared in July, Nasscom says MNCs, international law firms, publishing companies and legal research firms are now increasingly sourcing specialized legal services from India. This is a substantial shift from the existing outsourcing assignments, such as credit cards and online technical support. Forrester Inc has found that at least 12,000 legal jobs have been outsourced from the U.S. to offshore locations till 2004. Further, the firm has projected that of the 35,000 U.S. lawyer jobs expected to be shipped out, 60 to 70 percent could be headed India’s way. By 2015, the total number of outsourced jobs from the U.S. could touch 79,000. "Reports indicate that billing by Indian lawyers to U.S. firms for in-house work alone ranged from $5 million to $15 million in 2004," says Sunil Mehta, V-P, Nasscom. As of now, Mehta says, about 700 employees are estimated to be engaged in providing legal BPO services from India. The global spending on legal services is estimated to be at least $250 billion and Nasscom says the future looks brighter. "For a country which churns out close to 300,000 law graduates every year, and the job market still largely supply-driven, this certainly is good news," says Amit Bhagat, legal consultant, Ernst & Young. "We are especially happy with the quality of jobs being outsourced to us," says Shailesh Vikram Singh of Indianlegal.net, a legal outsourcing firm. All the staff engaged at Singh’s firm are lawyers who are "executing assignments involving high-end legal research and multi-jurisdictional surveys". Foreign law firms Eversheds, Allen & Overy, Baker & McKenzie and Hammonds Direct are affiliated with Indian companies working as third-party service providers. New Jersey law firm Sills, Cummins, Epstein & Gross are considering outsourcing to India the coding and organizing documents for major litigation cases. Louisville-based Stites & Harbison has outsourced legal research and pieces of M&A transaction to India and is currently considering forming an alliance with outsourcing vendors and Indian firms. Three other U.S. firms — Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy, Chad-Bourne & Park and White & Case — are talking to Indian BPOs to offshore some of their back-office functions to India. Mehta says: "The range of processes being outsourced in the legal sector has evolved from transcription, secretarial support, voice messaging and word processing to more domain specific work typically performed by paralegals, legal assistants and professional support lawyers. This includes contract review, drafting and management, patent research, analysis and writing, litigation support and legal research, general research and review."