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Expect Worldwide IT Spending to Decline by 2.7% in 2020

by Khaleej Express
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Worldwide IT spending is now expected to decline 2.7%‭ ‬in constant currency terms this year as COVID-19‭ ‬impacts the global economy and forces many organizations around the world to respond with contingency planning and spending cuts in the short term‭. ‬In line with previous economic recessions‭, ‬IT spending on hardware‭, ‬software‭, ‬and IT services is likely to decline by more than real‭ ‬GDP overall‭, ‬as commercial IT buyers and consumers implement rapid cuts to capital spending in line with declining revenues‭, ‬profits‭, ‬market valuations‭, ‬and employee headcounts‭.‬
‭”‬Overall IT spending will decline in 2020‭, ‬despite increased demand and usage for some technologies and services by individual companies and consumers‭,” ‬said‮ ‬Stephen Minton‭, ‬program vice president in IDC’s‮ ‬Customer Insights‭ & ‬Analysis‮ ‬group‭. “‬Businesses in‭ ‬sectors of the economy that are hardest hit during the first half of the year will react by delaying some purchases and projects‭, ‬and the lack of visibility related to medical factors will ensure that many organizations take an extremely cautious approach‭ ‬when it comes to budget contingency planning in the near term‭.”‬
Major spending declines this year are now expected in PCs‭, ‬tablets‭, ‬mobile phones‭, ‬and peripherals with overall devices spending‭ ‬expected to decline by 8.8%‭ ‬in constant currency terms‭. ‬The PC market was already expected to decline on the back of a strong Windows-driven refresh cycle in 2019‭, ‬but the crisis will significantly disrupt a smartphone market that was projected to post stronger returns this year as a result of 5G upgrades‭.‬
Spending on server/storage and network hardware will also decline overall despite strong demand for cloud services as enterprise‭ ‬customers delay purchases during the initial rapid response phase of the current crisis‭. ‬Total infrastructure spending‭ (‬including cloud‭) ‬will increase by 5.3%‭, ‬but all of this growth will come from enterprise spending on infrastructure as a service‭ (‬IaaS‭)‬‭ ‬and cloud provider spending on servers‭. ‬Meanwhile‭, ‬overall server/storage hardware spending will be down by 3.3%‭ ‬and enterprise‭ ‬network equipment spending will decline by 1.7%‭.‬
‭”‬Hardware spending in general is always identified for rapid spending cuts during any economic crisis‭, ‬as a means for enterprises to quickly protect short-term profitability‭,” ‬said Minton‭. “‬In previous economic crashes‭, ‬IT hardware has tended to overshoot‭ ‬the economic cycle on both the downside and in the recovery phase‭. ‬That’s because underlying demand drivers don’t change overnight‭, ‬but the timing of purchases is shifted and delayed‭, ‬and this can now be done even more quickly than in the past‭. ‬What’s different now is that cloud is a bigger factor than it was in any previous global recession‭, ‬and this should mean that overall spending is less volatile than in the last two major IT spending downturns‭.”‬
IT services spending will decline by 2%‭ ‬in 2020‭, ‬with the worst declines in project-oriented services as organizations hit the pause button on major new projects until business visibility improves‭. ‬Spending on managed services and support services will also decline‭, ‬in line with overall IT activities and hardware/software deployments‭. ‬Software will post positive growth of just under 2%‭ ‬overall‭, ‬largely due to cloud investments along with some resilient demand for specific categories‭, ‬which will be a component of response measures or are integral to ongoing business operations‭.‬
‭”‬There will be pockets of opportunity for software and related services during the next six months‭, ‬as organizations create response measures focused around increased remote work and collaboration‭,” ‬said Minton‭. “‬Organizations that are further along the digital transformation and cloud migration scales are likely to be best-positioned in terms of integrating these technologies into‭ ‬effective and agile response plans‭.”‬
Including telecom and other spending‭, ‬total ICT spending will decline by 1.6%‭ ‬to just under‭ $‬4.1‭ ‬trillion‭. ‬This compares to overall ICT growth of 3.5%‭ ‬last year‭, ‬when IT spending increased by almost 5%‭. ‬Telecom spending will be less impacted overall‭, ‬as demand for broadband remains extremely strong‭ (‬in some cases‭, ‬higher as a result of increased working from home and isolation measures‭).‬

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