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SAP chief tells European tech companies to wake up

Kagermann calls on Germans, others to break its technological dependency on America through greater investment, innovation.
Written by Matthew Broersma, Contributor
SAP's chief executive has called on Europe to break its technological dependency on America through greater investment and innovation.

Europe must build up its own IT industry and reduce its dependence on the United States if it is to stay competitive, SAP Chairman and CEO Henning Kagermann said in a keynote speech opening the CeBit trade show in Hannover, Germany, on Wednesday evening.

kagermann
Henning Kagermann
Chief executive, SAP

The IT industry has the most potential to innovate, the fewest restrictions and the most impact on other industries, but the sector is dominated by the states and accounts for only 1.5 percent of Germany's gross national product, Kagermann said.

"For each euro in the EU invested in major IT projects, some 75 cents flows into a market outside Germany today. This cannot be the way ahead for Europe," he warned.

The dynamics of the global economy also disproportionately benefit the United States, he said. He cited a study from management consultancy firm McKinsey which found that when US$1 of value creation moves out of the states, US$1.13 of new gross domestic product is created in its place; in Germany, when a euro of value creation moves abroad, only 79 cents of new GDP are created. "In the United States, jobs with little added value are quickly replaced by more productive ones," he said.

To push Europe ahead, the European Union needs a focused program of IT industry investment, concentrating on next-generation business IT and on embedded systems, Kagermann argued.

Businesses are relying increasingly on innovation in their business processes, rather than their end products, to compete, he said, and new service-oriented software architectures are ideally suited to deliver this kind of innovation.

"Very much like the automotive industry, we will have platforms that are the basis for many models. But our models will be so flexible that owners will be able to turn their convertibles into pickups themselves--depending on their current needs," he said.

As for embedded systems, these are now so pervasive that they're absolutely essential yet have become practically invisible, Kagermann said. "We all benefit from the latest opportunities offered by information and communication technology, but we no longer notice it."

In the future, 80 percent of the automotive industry's innovations will be due to IT, mostly enabled by embedded software, Kagermann said, quoting from a Spiegel magazine survey of heads of research at large automotive companies. He added that Europeans, and particularly Germans, are well-positioned to take the lead in embedded systems because they are used to dealing with the complexity of such systems.

"It's all about interdisciplinary thinking and development...These types of projects are complex by nature, but we have learned to handle complexity--and it is our strength," he said.

Matthew Broersma of ZDNet UK reported from London.


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