COMPUTERS
November 12, 2008 12:20 PM PST

IDC lowers IT spending forecast for 2009

Posted by Erica Ogg
  • Font size
  • Print

Industry analyst firm IDC is revising its yearly forecast on the IT budgets of companies around the world.

Because of the worldwide financial crisis, the firm expects spending on technology by enterprise companies to grow by just 2.6 percent next year compared with 2008. Before the late-September Wall Street meltdown, IDC was predicting a worldwide spending growth rate of 5.9 percent. In the U.S., it was expecting 4.2 percent growth, but now IDC is revising that to just 0.9 percent.

Companies like Cisco, Nortel, Dell, and others have already indicated they've seen or expect to see IT spending drop.

With the exception of storage, hardware will be the hardest hit by the spending cutbacks, while software and services will be relatively safer, according to IDC.

Regionally, spending in Japan, Western Europe, and the U.S. will take the biggest hit. Emerging markets like Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America will still experience "healthy" growth, according to the new forecast.

But IDC's report wasn't all doom and gloom. The firm says it expects IT spending to make "a full recovery" and reach 6 percent growth by 2012.

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who writes about consumer electronics and PCs, mostly as chief correspondent for Crave. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
Recent posts from Business Tech
EMC to cut 2,400 from workforce
Outsourcing shifts beyond Bangalore, Mumbai
Intel warning casts cloud over CES
Tech layoffs: The scorecard
Intel expects fourth-quarter revenue to drop 23 percent
Satyam chairman resigns amid accounting scandal
Windows 7 beta: First impressions
Sun acquires cloud company Q-layer
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
by turoa76 November 12, 2008 1:06 PM PST
So expected GROWTH is expected to drop from 5.9 to 2.6 percent. So spending will actually INCREASE from this year, but not as much as expected. So the headline is just another piece of sensationalist journalism, as it implies spending as a whole will drop compared to this year, which isn't the case.

Still, what to expect when the world is fixated on the belief that if your growth isn't greater than the growth of your previous year then you're as good as bankrupt and should be shorted.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

In the news now

Apple: DRM-free tunes, unibody MacBook Pro

roundup At Macworld, Phil Schiller touts 10 million songs sans DRM, plus 69-cent songs, a unibody 17-inch notebook, iLife updates, and more.


Countdown to CES

special coverage The tech community descends on Las Vegas as the Consumer Electronics Show gets ready to kick off in all its gadgety glory.


About Business Tech

Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Business Tech topics

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right