Title: HighLevel Seminar on ECommunications
1High-Level Seminar on E-Communications
- The development of the ICT sector during the
crisis International comparisons - Information Technology Outlook
- Graham Vickery, OECD
- Prague16 April 2009
-
2Outline
- What is the impact of the crisis on the ICT
sector? - How does it compare with other sectors?
- How does the crisis (so far) compare with the
previous ones? - What are economic implications?
- What are implications for policy?
3Global overview ICT supply side
- Rapid drop in ICT production linked with Q3-Q4
financial markets meltdown and global recession.
But 2008 positive overall due to Q1-Q3 growth.
Negative for 2009 - Goods US and Europe down. Asian countries
collapsed. - Services Slowing but not collapsing. Questions
for 2009, e.g. India services sourcing - Turbulence with recession IT investment is very
cyclical (accelerator effect
telecommunications and business CAPEX dropping),
personal consumption including services hit by
wealth effect, unemployment - 2007 mid-2008. Growth balanced in OECD
countries. E. Europe and non-OECD have grown much
faster - ICT markets Non-OECD countries (Russia, India,
China) took 23 of top 25 market growth positions
2000-2007. OECD share down 2003 85 gt 2007 78 - Drivers shifted from technology push gt
commercial and user-driven applications pull
4ICT sector opportunities and threats
5Semiconductors falling. Asia gaining
shareSemiconductor market by region, 1990-2009.
Current USD billionUSD billions, current prices
Source Information Technology Outlook 2008. 2008
partly estimated, 2009 projected from SIA data.
6Utilisation semiconductor manufacturing
7The challenge ICT goods plunging with the
economic crisis JapanDecember 1999January
2009. Year-on-year change, volume index,
seasonally adjusted, 3-month moving average
Source Information Technology Outlook database.
8 but ICT services holding up -
JapanYear-on-year change, production indices,
seasonally adjusted, 3-month moving average
Source Information Technology Outlook database.
9Collapse is worse in automobiles - France
December 1995 December 2008. Year on year
change, volume index, seasonally adjusted,
3-month moving average
Source Information Technology Outlook database.
10 and in the United States employmentDecember
2001January 2009. Year-on-year change, number
of employees, seasonally adj. 3-month moving
average
Source Information Technology Outlook database.
11Global firms crisis tough for IT equipment
Quarterly revenue growth (year-on-year) , Top-10
IT equipment
Revenues grew most of the year, Q4 decline
greater than revenue declines in 2001 for same
companies. Overall revenue drops same in both
periods. Source OECD calculations for top-10 IT
equipment firms from OECD top-250 ICT firms.
12Still relatively good for IT services ..
Top firms maintained growth through 2008, Q4
slowed a little. Driven by IT and Business
Process Outsourcing (ITO/BPO) but financial
market crisis slowing demand. Outsourcing revenue
growth to decline in 2009? Source OECD
calculations for top-10 IT services firms from
OECD top 250 ICT firms.
13.. and software
Top software firms high growth Q1-Q2, dropped in
Q3-Q4. Driven by business and consumer
investment. Source OECD calculations for top 10
software firms from OECD top 250 ICT firms.
14Chinas lead in ICT goods exports By region
1996-2007, USD current prices billions
Source OECD Information Technology Outlook, 2008.
15 Services trade and cross-border investment
- Trade in ICT services growing strongly
- IT services growing 15-20 p.a.
- Ireland by far largest OECD exporter 2007 USD 21
billion, surplus USD 20 billion - UK, US and Germany each around USD 10 billion
exports - India largest world exporter 2006 USD 30
billion, surplusUSD 27 billion 2007 and 2008
around USD 40 billion 2009? - High ICT and comms services share of FDI and
MAs Business cycle collapse - Shift to E. Europe and non-OECD. Non-OECD MA
investment has been up in numbers, less in values - 2008 down sharply. 2009 even more
16ICT specialists growing rapidly in most
countriesShare of ICT specialist occupations in
total employment,1995 and 2007
Classifications not harmonised shares for
European and non-European countries are not
directly comparable.
Source OECD Information Technology Outlook, 2008.
17Government ICT policy priorities 2008The right
policies for crisis and recovery?
- 1. Government online, government as model users
- 2. Broadband
- 3. ICT RD programmes
- 4. Promoting IT education
- 5. Technology diffusion to businesses
- 6. Technology diffusion to households
- 7. Industry-based and on-the-job training
- 8. General digital content development
- 9. Public sector information and content
- 10. ICT innovation support
- Source Information Technology Outlook 2008.