Enterprise IT spending has been stable as businesses continue to protect IT budgets
The risk of recession worldwide has continued to rise amid increasing inflation and the expectation of a tightening monetary policy. The rising inflation is driven by ongoing supply chain constraints, geopolitical tensions, growing food and energy prices, and early 2022 lockdowns in China. The second-order impact of these disruptions on Asia/Pacific* economies is now being felt.
The latest release of Worldwide Black Book: Live Edition reveals consumer IT spending in Asia/Pacific* is already taking the brunt, with market growth declining in 2022. A further slide is expected in 2023, depending on the severity of the economic slowdown. However, demand from enterprises and service providers for IT investments remains stable so far in Asia/Pacific. Any further worsening of the financial situation will also impact enterprise and service providers’ spending.
“One in two businesses in the region expect that IT cost price increase stemming from inflation will impact their spending plans for the rest of 2022,” says Vinay Gupta, Research Director, IT Spending Guides, IDC Asia/Pacific. “If the situation persists, businesses will either delay projects or adjust spends to focus on strategic initiatives essential for future business functions and needs,” he added.
The evolving impact on IT spending from the January versus June release of Black Book: Live Edition, together with a real-case scenario of the effect of an economic slowdown on IT Spending in 2022.
The Asia Pacific, excluding Japan and China (APeJC), is a mixed bag of countries. Countries like Singapore, South Korea, India, Thailand, and Taiwan are net importers of energy and commodities and are witnessing higher inflation because of increasing prices. However, Indonesia and Australia, which typically export coal, oil, gas, and other commodities, are benefiting from the current situation. Their inflation results from pent-up demand due to the economy’s opening and supply chain constraints. The scenario thus reports a reduced IT spending growth of 7.2 per cent against 8.6 per cent reported in the June release of Black Book Live. The situation in China is improving with lockdowns lifted and easing supply chain constraints. A strong recovery is expected in 2023 as government intervention will drive stability and growth.
Consumer IT spending (related to consumer purchase of mobiles, tablets, PCs, wearables, and peripherals) slowed in the first half of 2022 because many device purchases have already happened in the last two years to enable work from home or online classes. Expectations were that 2022 would not be that great a year. However, due to rising inflation, even the remaining growth prospect is taking a hit.
Enterprise IT spending has been stable as businesses continue to protect IT budgets in the short term. Operational budgets account for a larger share of overall spending (cloud, subscription, as a service) and are difficult to pull back at short notice. Some capital spending is vulnerable along with investments in new projects because the focus will shift to keeping the lights on rather than putting money on new initiatives. However, the willingness and ability to increase IT budgets in line with rising prices is more uncertain today.
Tags: Consumer ITIDC