Information, communication, telecom spending to rise to $40 bn in 2005 in India: Gartner

By Our Corporate Bureau | 08 Dec 2004

1

Mumbai: According to Gartner, India will remain the highest growth market for telecommunications with around 35 million new subscribers in 2005, an 18 percent increase from 2004, with the growth occurring in selected technologies mainly mobile. This accounts for almost one fourth of the new subscribers forecasted in Asia Pacific.

"Enterprise spending on information communications and technology (ICT) in India is expected to grow at 16.6 per cent to US$22.88bn as compared to Asia Pacific growth at 7.6 per cent in 2005," said Sujay Chohan, VP and research director, Gartner India. "For vendors the stakes couldn't be higher; especially local vendors, who have long ignored the local market, cannot afford to miss this transition. The future is very exciting and in just five years, the IT industry will have little resemblance to that of today, yielding extraordinary benefits with network security, convergence, IP telephony, software as services and instant messaging all maturing within 36 months.Utility computing and wireless LANs will also become more established while we will begin to experience the value of RFID tags, grid computing, web conferencing and real-time infrastructure during the next three years."

Enterprise spending in APAC on hardware next year will rise 6.3 per cent to US$36.9bn, with software increasing 12.4 per cent to US$5.6bn while telecom will grow 7.5 per cent to US$132.5bn and IT services will gain 8.4 per cent to US$33.6bn.

USD billion

2003

2004

2005

% growth 05/04

Hardware

2.4

2.75

3.34

21.1

Software

0.4

0.44

0.52

16.4

Telecom

12.22

14.46

16.7

15.5

IT Services

1.71

1.96

2.32

18.3

Total

16.72

19.62

22.88

16.6

Note: (1) Numbers may not add due to rounding error.
          (2) Exchange rate calculated at $1 = Rs 45.27

In India, of the US$22.88bn spend in 2005 on enterprise ICT, US$3.34bn is the projected spend on hardware, an increase of 21.1 per cent over 2004; US$0.52bn (16.4 per cent increase) on software; US$16.7bn (15.5 per cent increase) on telecom and US$2.32bn (18.3 per cent increase) on IT Services.

According to Gartner, India will remain the highest growth market for telecommunications with around 35 million new subscribers in 2005, an 18 percent increase from 2004, with the growth occurring in selected technologies mainly mobile. This accounts for almost one fourth of the new subscribers forecasted in Asia Pacific.

Consumer segment is rapidly gaining importance, driven by adoption of mobile services. This is reflected in their increased contribution towards spending for telecommunication services, from 35 per cent in 2002 to 43 per cent in 2005. By 2008 the consumer segment will account for more than half of telecommunications spending.

The China factor
Gartner also said that Open Source and offshore IT services will continue to grow, while it warned global IT vendors to take emerging competition from China seriously with at least three Chinese IT companies becoming significant global competitors by 2010.

"With confidence growing in government circles about the capabilities of open source software, along with the increasing numbers of announcements about open source initiatives, we believe 60 per cent of large and mid-size government agencies in Asia Pacific will use open source software for applications in their core business processes by 2010. That compares with less than 15 per cent today," said Chohan.

Offshore IT services
According to Gartner, the hype of offshore IT services is real and reflects a dramatic uptake in global sourcing of these services. When compared with the total IT services market, less than 3 percent of spending (US $606 billion) is attributable to sourced services in 2004. By 2007, the globally sourced component of IT services spending will be about US $50 billion, or 7 percent of the US $728 billion total.

Offshore BPO
The growth in Offshore BPO services outpaces the growth in global sourcing of IT services. Offshore component of global BPO services spend is expected to grow from US $3 billion (2.4 percent of total market spend of US $124 billion in 2004) to US $24 billion (15 percent of the total market spend of US $161 billion in 2007).

Following are a series of other predictions Gartner has forecasted globally:

  • Gartner expects the PC vendor market to experience at least three lean years after 2005 with three of the top 10 vendors exiting the market by 2007.

"Unit growth will fall below the double-digit rates the market is accustomed to, and revenue growth will come to a standstill," said Chohan. "Price competition will intensify as vendors struggle to maintain growth in an austere market environment characterised by weak replacement activity and the growing importance of emerging markets."

Currently, the top 10 worldwide PC vendors, by unit shipment, are Dell, HP, IBM, Fujitsu, Fujitsu Siemens, Toshiba, NEC, Apple Computer, Lenovo Group and Gateway. Of the top 10 worldwide vendors, only Dell has consistently been profitable in the past several years. Gartner said the PC divisions of HP and IBM are vulnerable to being spun off if their drag on margins and profitability is deemed too great by their parent companies.

  • IT services will continue to grow in Asia Pacific, where mission-critical services are in high demand.
  • Micro-commerce will emerge as a major new business opportunity and there will be a fundamental change in the way software is built and used with the continuing development of web services.

"The changing business paradigm will force vendors and organisations alike to take tough decisions. Going forward in the short term there will be complexities arising from the transition, as organisations migrate keeping the 'old way' while simultaneously embracing whole new architectures, skills and technologies" said Chohan.

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