Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Forrester: U.S. debt ceiling showdown will affect IT spending

By | July 28, 2011, 8:06am PDT

As Washington D.C. bickers over whether to issue the country another credit card in the form of the U.S. debt ceiling, Forrester Research predicts that the outcome will affect technology spending.

In a blog post, Forrester analyst Andrew Bartels said Forrester was planning to project 7.4 percent growth in IT spending for 2011 and 10.4 percent in 2012.

However, the outcome of U.S. debt ceiling talks will swing those forecasts. After all, the Feds are a big buyer of technology.

Bartels wrote:

Our forecast did recognize three threats to economic growth, and thus three risks to our forecast: 1) a failure to reach a sensible resolution to raise the US debt ceiling and start on a path to lower budget deficits; 2) a failure of European governments to reach a sensible resolution to the Greek debt crisis that lowered the Greek debt burden and reduced the risk of a broader debt crisis that included Italy and Spain; and 3) overreaction by China and India to rising inflation that reduced their growth.

Greece is defused for now, large tech vendor earnings have been solid and it’s too early to ponder China and India just yet.

That leaves the U.S. debt ceiling. See CBS News for the latest:

Bartels outlines the following:

  • If the debt ceiling isn’t raised by Aug. 2 and the U.S. default, Forrester will cut its 2011 IT spending forecast to 5.5 percent. Bartels reasoning revolves around the aftershocks of a U.S. default. Credit markets will be rattled and many IT projects depend on financing.
  • Other IT spending hits will revolve around what proposal is ultimately accepted. In any case, IT market growth will slide a bit. Bartels added that the technology market should outpace the U.S. economy as long as there isn’t a recession.

In other words, technology projects may fall into the limbo zone. Juniper Networks this week already outlined spotty spending. Networking companies such as Juniper and Cisco typically spot a slowdown in IT spending first.

Juniper CEO Kevin Johnson said:

In early June I spoke in an investor conference is focused on macro signals we were seeing in the market. With continued use of coverage topics including the sovereign debt situation Europe, rising at a point in US opposite consumer confidence, the impact of the disaster in Japan, and lower GDP expectations in many parts of the world, it is evident that people are trying to digest the macro economic signals and understand what impact they are having on the buying patterns of customers.

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: Forrester: U.S. debt ceiling showdown will affect IT spending
joshandrebekah 29th Jul
@PriMinister Section 4 of the Fourteenth amendment says the federal government always has to pay its debt obligations first before anything else. The US can't default unless there is nothing in the coffers to even cover our debt obligations which is not the case. Once the debt obligations are met, then the president will be left with how to make the rest stretch.
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We're doing it to ourselves
Robert Hahn 28th Jul
Sorry, I'm old enough -- and have been through this enough times -- to know that "the debt crisis" is a big kabuki designed to distract us from the fact that our elected representatives are spending us into the poorhouse.
We're told that "the responsible adults" are those who want to borrow another trillion or two and spend it now -- on ourselves -- while sending the bill into the future for those now in school to pay off. Meanwhile, those yelling "Stop!" to all this are called "fringe extremists."

OK, they're fringe extremists. And we are the next Greece. Which means that foreigners already have the power (and will soon have the will) to simply stop lending us any more money. That's the real debt ceiling. The one Congress can't do anything about.

When it hits, federal spending will drop 43% in a matter of weeks. It will be very, very ugly. And all because we lack the will to stop living beyond our means.
Against your children's income, but your grandchildrens.

The collapse of these formerly capitalist economies will have a devastating effect on global freedom.
@Robert Hahn

Unfortunately, the main power behind both parties is primarily bickering about the finer points of how to bankrupt the country, not whether or not not we should.

Obviously we have to raise the debt limit this go around but I pretty much agree that major concessions need to go with it.

If it takes a subset of political extremism which is willing to hold a gun to the head of our economy, so be it. If we are going to implode and have to rebuild may as well do it now rather than later when we have more debt piled on.
I wonder if Obama is going to get the green light to bankrupt the United States? We are bing told that as tax payers we have to learn within our means, while the politicians are spending like there is no tomorrow. Personally I say vote every one of them out and start over. Or better yet hold Politicians responsible for their actions.
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No shock
John L. Ries 28th Jul
The money spent by governments goes somewhere. Even money used to pay government employees (the right's favorite whipping boys for the last 50 years) is spent by them to buy food, clothing, cars, houses, etc.

Yes, we should get deficit spending under control, but we shouldn't pretend that there aren't any negative consequences for doing so. Nothing's free.
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The money spent by governments COMES from somewhere. The money used to pay government employees first is taken from the taxpaying public.

This means that each dollar spent by government has actually less economic power than when it was in the private sector. In economic terms, this is called economic drag.

So, yes, you're right. Nothing is free. Money spent by government has less value than money spent in the private sector.
Money can be wasted, it doesn't just go around in circles.

Directing scarce resources to the unproductive lowers the wealth generating capacity of an economy. Everyone loses out with lower real incomes.

Surprising this lesson of controlled economies (eg communist) has been forgotten. I guess we need another reminder.
@John L. Ries

While I certainly think the gov't should pay for any employees it has - IMO it may just have too many employees. Most of these jobs (specially the IT ones) can be done by the private sector, and don't really need to be part of the government itself.
The end goal of this debt crisis is to devaluate the US dollar even more, the ultimate goal of international bankers is to replace the dollar as a country reserve money with something different. However, there is an alternative to save americans from this crisis, if the american society should soon stop importing foreign goods and would start producing american made goods, they could save their economy and stop devaluation of the dollar.
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????
Spoiled Pork 28th Jul
@Gabriel Hernandez I was with you till you said we should stop imports?? I disagree, however we should increase exports, and the only way to do that is by doing things that democrats will call, breaks for the rich.

Whenever we do anything to make the domestic production of goods easier, and more attractive, democrats start playing the old class warfare tune.

Ignoring the fact that huge corporations employ huge numbers of people. Perhaps because when most people become self sufficient successful and independent, they tend to stop voting for democrats who only have handouts and entitlements to offer.
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Default?
Spoiled Pork 28th Jul
The threat of default is a myth. I would even go so far as to call it a lie. If we do not raise the ceiling in time we still have the income to pay our debt obligations.

It is the rest of the government spending and institutions that would be in trouble. Obama knows this, yet he continues to claim that we are in danger of default. This should bother everyone of us that our president is telling flat out lies in an effort to get us to support his spending addiction.
@Spoiled Pork Actually, default is real, you are assuming that the gov will pay its external creditors first, which only some of them will be, the truth is, the gov will make decisions as to which creditors will be paid and which one wont.

One option that the gov will try (at some point) in the future is ask creditor nations to forgive *part* of the debt so the debt is reduced to a managable level. even this option is a form of default. either way, the gov will not be able to pay *all* foreign creditors and pay its US creditors as well.
@PriMinister Section 4 of the Fourteenth amendment says the federal government always has to pay its debt obligations first before anything else. The US can't default unless there is nothing in the coffers to even cover our debt obligations which is not the case. Once the debt obligations are met, then the president will be left with how to make the rest stretch.
Ha! My crappy credit score is actually better than my government's!?

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