Recession over for technology sector
Published 9 April 2010
Recession for the IT sector is over; IT spending in the United States will grow by 8.4 percent this year, to $550 billion; better outlook is helped by higher spending on communications equipment, accompanying the ongoing rebound in computer and software purchases
A new report on information technology offers more evidence that an industry recovery is under way, with U.S. spending now expected to grow faster than previously believed. Forrester Research now expects information-technology spending in the United States to grow by 8.4 percent this year, to $550 billion. This is up from its January forecast of a 6.6 percent increase compared with 2009.
The better outlook is helped by higher spending on communications equipment than Forrester previously expected, accompanying the ongoing rebound in computer and software purchases.
TMCNet quotes the report — titled “U.S. and Global IT Market Outlook: Q1 2010” — to say that the worldwide tech market will grow by 7.7 percent as measured in U.S. dollars, to nearly $1.6 trillion. This is slightly lower than Forrester’s previous forecast of a 8.1 percent growth. This is because the Greek financial crisis weakened the euro and strengthened the U.S. dollar, Forrester analyst Andrew Bartels said.
Technology spending looks to have hit bottom in the third quarter of 2009 and started to turn around late in the year, according to Forrester. As expected, technology spending in the fourth quarter were “generally level with or slightly higher than the same period in 2008 — clear evidence that the downturn is over and that renewed growth has started,” Bartels said in Thursday’s report.
Spending on computer equipment and software will be strong this year, with percentage growth in the double digits for both sectors, Forrester predicts. Many businesses had put off replacements and upgrades during the economic downturn.
Information-technology consulting services and communications equipment will each grow by about 7 percent. IT outsourcing will see slower growth, just under 4 percent, though it had been the only sector to grow last year.
A recent earnings report from business software company Oracle Corp. confirms Forrester’s outlook. For the fiscal third quarter that ended in February, the company posted a 17 percent revenue increase, to $6.4 billion, a sign that large companies are steadily boosting their technology spending.
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