Date:03/04/20
The firm is now forecasting a 2.7% decrease in worldwide IT spending this year. It was projecting growth of 4.3% just one month prior, marking a dramatic 7% decline in the last month. IDC forecasted growth of 5.1% at the end of January.
The abrupt reversal underlines the extent to which the coronavirus pandemic is leaving analysts, and the global economy at large, flat footed as it permeates every facet of society, bringing much of the world to a standstill. Nearly 10 million people filed for unemployment benefits in the United States during the last two weeks of March and stay-at-home orders are now in place across much of the country.
“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, a VP at IDC, in a prepared statement. He also noted that ongoing uncertainty related to the length of the pandemic’s impact, including the human and economic toll, could cause extended spending contractions.
“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,” he explained.
Demand for cloud services remains high, but enterprises are delaying purchases due to the crisis, according to IDC. Total spending on infrastructure will grow 5.3% this year, but all of that growth will be attributed to infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) and cloud provider spending on servers, the firm said.
Software is another relatively bright spot with global spending forecast to jump 1.7% this year, but that’s a far cry from the 10% gains it reported last year. Infrastructure spending increased 8.8% last year, according to IDC.
Global IT spending falls into rapid decline
Global IT spending projections have slid from positive to negative territory in a matter of weeks. The market, which includes hardware, software, and IT services, is now expected to decline at a greater rate than gross domestic product overall, according to a new report from IDC.The firm is now forecasting a 2.7% decrease in worldwide IT spending this year. It was projecting growth of 4.3% just one month prior, marking a dramatic 7% decline in the last month. IDC forecasted growth of 5.1% at the end of January.
The abrupt reversal underlines the extent to which the coronavirus pandemic is leaving analysts, and the global economy at large, flat footed as it permeates every facet of society, bringing much of the world to a standstill. Nearly 10 million people filed for unemployment benefits in the United States during the last two weeks of March and stay-at-home orders are now in place across much of the country.
“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, a VP at IDC, in a prepared statement. He also noted that ongoing uncertainty related to the length of the pandemic’s impact, including the human and economic toll, could cause extended spending contractions.
“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,” he explained.
Demand for cloud services remains high, but enterprises are delaying purchases due to the crisis, according to IDC. Total spending on infrastructure will grow 5.3% this year, but all of that growth will be attributed to infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) and cloud provider spending on servers, the firm said.
Software is another relatively bright spot with global spending forecast to jump 1.7% this year, but that’s a far cry from the 10% gains it reported last year. Infrastructure spending increased 8.8% last year, according to IDC.
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