UK-India CETA boosts tech talent, cross-border growth

NEW DELHI, INDIA — India and the United Kingdom are setting the stage for a new era in cross-border business collaboration, with the recent signing of the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA).
According to a report from Confederation of Indian Industry, the landmark pact, along with the Double Contribution Convention (DCC), aims to streamline skilled professional mobility, reduce compliance costs, and strengthen the technology and services sectors between the two nations.
CETA formalizes talent mobility, strengthens trade
Signed in July, CETA marks the first comprehensive trade framework between India and the UK, extending beyond traditional goods and services.
The agreement incorporates forward-looking commitments in areas such as digital trade, investment facilitation, regulatory cooperation, and emerging technologies.
“Not only does it reflect a shared ambition to build a modern, comprehensive, and future-ready economic framework, but also strengthens bilateral trade, enhances investor confidence, and deepens integration between the two economies,” the report said.
The pact is expected to open avenues for Indian exports, enhance regulatory alignment, and support ecosystem-level collaboration in pharmaceuticals, technology, and clean energy.
It also reinforces a framework for temporary business mobility, supporting time-bound movement of skilled professionals for service delivery, project execution, and knowledge transfer, particularly in IT-enabled and technology-intensive sectors.
Importantly, CETA does not create new migration pathways but formalizes existing routes for business visitors, intra-corporate transferees, and service suppliers.
DCC eases cost and compliance
Alongside CETA, the UK and India introduced the DCC to eliminate the need for dual social security contributions.
The framework is designed to exempt professionals and employers from paying contributions in both countries for the same assignment period, which can last up to three years.
“Around 75,000 workers and over 900 companies are expected to benefit from this,” the report noted.
The convention addresses cost and compliance challenges associated with temporary cross-border assignments, allowing Indian IT firms to remain competitive globally while ensuring predictability and regulatory safeguards for workforce planning.
Strategic enablement over mere access
The agreements underscore a shift in focus from mere access to talent toward enabling high-performing professionals to contribute effectively within existing operational models.
“The central challenge for organisations was never finding Indian talent, it was deploying that talent efficiently, compliantly, and at scale. CETA begins to answer that by shifting the focus on enablement instead of just access,” the report said.
For the outsourcing and IT services industry, these developments signal a strategic opportunity. Firms can now leverage Indian expertise more predictably, blending offshore depth with selective global deployment.
Beyond technical proficiency, Indian professionals are recognized for agility, accountability, and self-driven learning—critical traits in fast-moving domains such as artificial intelligence (AI), cloud modernization, and cybersecurity.
The true impact will depend on how businesses translate policy into operational practice, potentially redefining cross-border talent engagement for years to come.

Independent




