India will require nine times as many digital skilled workers by 2025: AWS report By CIOReviewIndia Team

India will require nine times as many digital skilled workers by 2025: AWS report

CIOReviewIndia Team | Thursday, 25 February 2021, 11:51 IST

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AWS reportThe requirement for digital skills is rising and it is expected to increase by manifolds in the coming years. Now, a new report commissioned by Amazon Web Services (AWS) highlights just how swiftly this demand is evolving how our existing workforce is countering to these challenges.

AWS today published the findings of a research titled ‘Unlocking APAC’s Digital Potential: Changing Digital Skill Needs and Policy Approaches’. The research analyses the digital skills applied by workers in their jobs today and projects the digital skills required by workforces over the next five years in the APAC (Asia Pacific) region, which includes India, Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea.

The research revealed that close to 150 million workers in the above-mentioned APAC countries apply digital skills in their jobs today. While the scope of digital skill utilisation in the workforce varies by country, cloud computing expertise cuts across the most commonly applied digital skills in each country. In India, 12% of the country’s workforce applies digital skills in their jobs. This number stands around 58.8 million. Fascinatingly, while the percentage of the workforce that applies digital skills is the lowest compared to other countries in the APAC region, India has the highest number of workers doing the same. For instance, in Japan, 58% of the workforce apply digital skills in their jobs, which roughly translates to 38.6 million people. Likewise, 19 % of the workforce apply digital skills in their jobs in India, which roughly translates to 25.1 million people. These numbers are even higher for South Korea, Australia and Singapore where 62%, 64% and 63% of the workforce apply digital skills in their jobs respectively, which roughly translates to 16.7, 8.2 and 2.2 million people respectively.

The report also revealed that by 2025, the average worker in the six APAC countries will need to gain seven new digital skills to keep pace with technological change, and the number of workers requiring such skills will grow over five-fold. For this to happen, the six APAC countries will need an estimated 5.7 billion digital skill training over the next five years. In addition to this, the report says that almost 60 percent of non-digitally skilled and disenfranchised workers in the six APAC economies today will likely require basic digital skill training in all competence areas by 2025.

As far as India is concerned, AWS’s report shown that digitally skilled workers currently represent 12% of India’s workforce. The research estimates that the number of workers in India requiring digital skills will need to increase nine times by 2025, and the average worker in India will need to develop seven new digital skills by 2025 to keep pace with technology advancements and demand. This amounts to a total of 3.9 billion digital skill training from 2020 to 2025.

As per the report, 76% of the digital workers in India today expect cloud computing will be a required competency for digital workers to perform their jobs proficiently by 2025. Cloud architecture design, software operations support, website/game/software development, large-scale data modelling, and cybersecurity skills are the top five in-demand digital skills in India.

To meet this demand, AWS said that it has partnered with several higher education institutions in India in order to make the students industry-ready. The company that said that seven higher education institutions in India, which includes Chitkara University, Punjab; Galgotias University, Uttar Pradesh; Manav Rachna University, Delhi and NCR; Noida Institute of Engineering and Technology, Uttar Pradesh; Sharda University, Delhi and NCR; and SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Tamil Nadu, have recently integrated AWS-designed cloud computing content into their mainstream college syllabus. These institutes are now offering undergraduate degree and postgraduate diploma programs that are designed to address India’s growing requirement for cloud skills in cloud architecture, data analytics, cybersecurity, machine learning, and software development.

In addition to this, AWS said that it provides a range of free training opportunities, including more than 500 free courses, interactive labs, and virtual day-long training sessions that are accessible through AWS Training and Certification. It also offers students free, self-paced, online learning content for cloud career pathways related to in-demand jobs such as cloud engineer, cybersecurity specialist, machine learning scientist, and data scientist.

“The research highlights the demand for more digital workers even in the non-technology sectors such as manufacturing and education,” Rahul Sharma, President, Public Sector – AISPL, AWS India and South Asia, said on the occasion.

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