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

GM hopes its Net ventures help trim costs

Carmaker_s officials seek new income, cheaper operations. more »

Encryption Regs Fall Short

Industry groups say a proposed change to US encryption regulations doesn_t go far enough. more »

Discussing subscriber goals

AT&T wants more subscribers for Excite@Home. more »

A problem with Windows 95 and 98

Microsoft patches IE, Windows. more »

Talks about the post-PC era

Gadgets, home networking highlight changing Comdex. more »

Award in the gold category

Apple_s iMac named "design of the decade". more »

Feeding on increased PC penetration in Latin America and on U.S.

Quepasa.com-Spanish-language web sites target Hispanics. more »

Christmas virus hits big companies

W97M/Prilissa - a bug whose payload is set to go off Christmas Day - strikes Fortune 500 firms on three continents. more »

Regulation of Internet activities

NEW MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS TO INCREASE INTERNET CONTROL. more »

Microsoft CEO says little about antitrust trial

"Personal Web" vision depends on desktops as much as Internet devices more »