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NEW DELHI: Outsourcing
is gradually becoming the backbone of Indian service
sectors. In the last fiscal India earned $6.7
bn by providing services in software, technology
and manufacturing outsourcing.
Legal services are the next destination
for a "cool" BPO. According to a study
by the US-based Forester Research, the current
annual value of legal outsourcing which is worth
$80 mn can rise up to $4 bn and can fetch 79,000
jobs in India by 2015.
"The benefit of the outsourcing
companies in the US would translate into a cost
saving of about 10-12 per cent. The potential
of the Indian resources to absorb the increasing
demand in legal outsourcing is because India enjoys
the economic advantages of the wage difference
and less perks and overheads," the report
says.
National Association of Software
and Service Companies (NASSCOM) also projected
that Legal Processing Outsourcing providers (LPOs)
in India will soon rise up to $3-4 bn.
But this glossy figure has many
challenges ahead. The most important challenge
to the newly-born sector is the need for Indian
lawyers to pass US Bar exams, conflict of interest
rules and data security.
"Legal outsourcing is different
from any other knowledge process outsourcing in
a fundamental sense. In most jurisdictions lawyers
have to be qualified and enrolled in order to
advise their clients. Lawyers have to be licensed
to practice law (within a certain jurisdiction).
Hence legally, one cannot advise, as a lawyer,
on laws one is not licensed to practice.
"Similarly, one cannot wholly
sub-contract one's legal work to non-lawyers in
other jurisdictions," says Sumeet Kachwaha
of Kachwaha and Partners.
Still the work is of a secretarial
nature and includes patent drafting, legal research,
contract review and monitoring. However, experts
are hoping to receive high-end sophisticated contracts,
which require a strong legal base of international
standards.
On the flip-side, the Indian
Advocates Act, which deals with the professional
conduct of lawyers, does not support work for
other countries.
On the bright side, certain branches
of law, which are of a global nature, like Intellectual
Property laws (patents and trademarks) can give
LPOs a filip in their endeavour.
Even, in specific laws governing
companies and trade in securities, which hugely
differ from one country to another, may limit
LPOs to paralegal and secretarial work.
"As per Bar Council Rules,
a lawyer cannot take another job while he is on
the roll. He would have to get his licence suspended
as a pre-condition. Lawyers would not be able
to take employment in legal outsourcing outfits
without having to give up their right to be called
'lawyers'," says Sumeet, indicating that
it will be difficult for LPOs to retain the interest
of its employees in such a case.
Meanwhile, Khaitan & Co,
a leading law firm from Kolkata has already started
an LPO by floating a new company 'Neoworth' and
engaged 10 US-enrolled lawyers.
"Although the legal system
in India and US are different, the analysis part
of the work is the same. We are ready to receive
high-end jobs," says Pinto Khaitan, partner
of the Khaitan & Co.
Many lawyers are thinking on
the lines of Khaitan. According to them, an Indian
lawyer can be as good as his American counterpart
in US Federal laws if properly trained in US law.
What is required of an attorney, either Indian
or American, is not that he should be aware of
all laws and regulations but that he should be
ready to acquire that knowledge.
"Documentation, standard
agreements, plaints, etc, can be drawn up in India,
quickly processed and implemented through a BPO,"
says Asha Nayar Basu of S Jalan & company.
But not all of Basu's friends
agree with her.
"Such businesses will be
operated mostly by existing BPOs, junior advocates
with an entrepreneurial bent of mind and probably
smaller law firms. The larger law ones will not
be interested in taking such work as they may
not find it intellectually stimulating and rewarding,"
says Diljeet Titus of Titus & Co.
Another group reject this idea
for a reason more impersonal - technical problems.
There is a strong political opposition
in the US against outsourcing as may affect the
livelihood of US attorneys may also serve as a
roadblock.
Titus estimates the LPO industry
in India to be worth $50-100 mn by the year 2010.
He sees a prospective clientele
for legal outsourcing in MNCs but not in reputed
international firms, especially after the Law
Society of the UK said firms would be liable to
bear the loss to the client if it had outsourced
work.
"In a short while, this
model may prove to be successful primarily because
of a large inflow of fresh graduates into the
profession, attractive pay-packages and lure of
metropolitan cities," says Titus.
KUMAR RAHUL
PTI[ SUNDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2005 11:40:03 AM] |