Though Goldman Sachs analysts now forecasts that U.S. IT spending outlook for the remainder of 2008 will slow perhaps two points compared to 2007 levels--meaning growth will come in at fiver percent rather than seven percent--IT suppliers predictably say the slowdown won't hurt their firms.
Executives "said that while they’ve seen some small impacts from the U.S. economy with respect to IT spending, there is little to fear in the bigger picture," reports eWeek reporter Reness Boucher Ferguson.
The good news for IT suppliers is that a decline this time is simply a slowing of the rate of growth, not an actual negative downturn. The rationale is that IT spending in recent years has tracked fairly closely with gross domestic product, growing just a bit faster than GDP.Of course, what else would you expect a CEO to say? It's a bit like running into associates in the hall at a trade show, and asking them how business is. No matter what the reality, the answer always seems to be that "business is great."
And since GDP is forecast to grow at about 3.5 percent for 2008, IT spending should come in above that rate.
IT spending is a different thing from communications spending, to be sure. There is no linear extrapolation from the one to the other. But neither are the two types of spending completely uncorrelated. A deceleration from seven percent growth to five percent growth isn't a disaster by any means.
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