IT spend up 1% in 2001 - IDC

Published: 17 November 2001 y., Saturday
The figure comes from IDC which forecast spending growth will recover slowly to 5.5 per cent by the end of 2002. The year 2000 saw 12 per cent growth. The analyst firm predicts hardware spending will decline 9 per cent this year, and a further 1 per cent drop will follow in 2002. But software and services spending growth will recover, to some extent, in 2002, with an upturn in the second half of the year expected to produce 2002 worldwide growth rates of 11 per cent for software and 9 per cent for services. The US slowdown has spread to Western Europe. Hardware spending there will show a decline of 4 per cent this year and will decline by a further 2 per cent in 2002. In Japan, PC spend is declining by 16 per cent this year. According to IDC, software spending will recover to the strong growth rates of previous years, driven by investment in ebusiness and other areas. IT services will remain strong as well, recording 9 per cent growth worldwide this year despite the industry slowdown. IDC's figures are the results of a study, Operation Beacon, set up to quantify the impact of the September 11 terrorist attacks, along with other economic factors, on the state of the worldwide IT market.
Šaltinis: theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Hack Arrest “A Matter of Time”

The FBI has identified the probable culprit behind last week_s Internet attacks, security experts said Monday. more »

An infant industry in Poland

Poland Connects To Internet Revolution. more »

«DotComGuy» pledges to live online throughout 2000

He has spent the last six weeks holed up in his Dallas townhouse, using the Internet for everything: food, clothing and furniture. more »

FBI posts free software to combat hacker attacks

Software that can help Web sites neutralize the sort of denial of service attacks that felled Yahoo and others in recent days has been posted by the FBI and computer service organizations. more »

A study

The Business Software Association and Microsoft released a study showing that pirate software remains a big problem in the Baltics. more »

Blocked students find backdoor to Napster

A sort of "free Napster" movement is surfacing to counter efforts by record companies and universities to quash access to the software, which lets online users swap digital music tracks. more »

Microsoft names new consumer OS: Windows Me

The software giant has settled on a name for its next consumer operating system: Windows Me, short for Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition. more »

Japan Web Site Hacks Continue Unabated

Following a recent spate of attacks on Web sites operated by its agencies and departments, the Japanese Government said it would wage war on hackers. more »

Poland_s Optimus Wants Internet Partners By End-H1

Polish computer maker Optimus is in talks with more than ten potential partners to jointly develop the Internet portal onet.pl. more »

Chips embark on road to 20 gigahertz

If certain technological hurdles can be cleared, processors running at a mind-boggling 20 gigahertz could be commercially available in the next eight years. more »