Analyst: Slowdown in global IT spending continues

Summary: A record number of companies will cut their IT budgets or keep spending flat next year, according to market analyst Datamonitor

Global growth in IT spending will slow for the fourth year in a row as the credit crunch compounds the problems of the already stagnant market.

A record number of companies — slightly more than 60 percent — will cut their IT budgets or keep spending flat next year, according to market analyst Datamonitor.

The lifelessness of the market has been exacerbated by a sharp fall in businesses planning to significantly increase their IT budget, down from 21 percent in 2006 to nine percent in 2009.

Daniel Okubo, a technology analyst with Datamonitor, said in a statement: "For the past couple of years enterprises have been cutting back IT budget increases as they adopt a more cautious viewpoint of the global economy."

"More recently, the financial services market, as seen by the recent collapse of Lehman Brothers, is suffering from a crisis in confidence, caused by a spate of write-downs and concerns over liquidity," said Okubo.

The findings echo concerns raised by Charles Ward, chief operating officer of IT trade association Intellect, that companies will put their hardware refreshes on hold in response to the credit crunch, and warnings from computer manufacturer Dell that demand is weakening.

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The only industry to buck the flat IT market is healthcare, where 57 percent of companies said they plan to expand spending.

Datamonitor attributed this to governments investing in new technologies to ease the strain placed on healthcare by the aging baby-boomer generation.

Topic: Networking

About

Nick Heath is chief reporter for TechRepublic UK. He writes about the technology that IT-decision makers need to know about, and the latest happenings in the European tech scene.

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  • Hastening the switch to Open Source

    Considering that Global IT spending is at least twice to *ten times* what is should be, this is a good thing.

    Companies have been over-paying for proprietary software for years. In many cases this is simply a pride/arrogance thing - "Oh, we use the <i>market leader</i> and they spank us for <i>millions</i>, feel the <i>size</i> of my IT budget!!".

    This kind of hubris is no longer tenable, companies now need to consider <i>survival</i> and CEOs, Finance Directors and IT Directors need to think long and hard about what their proprietary software is costing them.

    PostgreSQL can do the same job as Oracle.
    Samba and OpenLDAP can do the same job as Windows.
    In fact Open Source products can do the same job as any combination of proprietary...

    If you can do the same job at a fraction of the cost - you'd be pretty dumb not to in this environment, right?

    Open Source just got a lot more interesting...
    Sothis-a86f1