Posts Tagged ‘Economic’

A review of real economic developments across SA, Africa and the world

January 27th, 2012

The South African government is hoping its new Special Economic Zones (SEZs) Bill and policy will create the framework for the development of new industrial nodes outside of the traditional industrial heartlands of Gauteng, the Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal, while improving the performance of the existing Industrial Development Zones (IDZs). Trade and Industry Minister Dr Rob Davies (pictured) says the draft legislative framework has been crafted in an effort to “broaden” the scope and composition of dedicated industrial areas and to support industrial decentralisation, where the economic development case could be proven. Under the proposed law, municipal and provincial authorities, or even public–private partnerships, are empowered to approach government with plans to develop SEZs, where such concentration of industrial infrastructure could improve prospects for investment, growth and job creation over a sustainable period. The proposed law also aims to improve the funding, governance and operational performance of the four existing IDZs, as well any future SEZs. In fact, an SEZ board has been proposed to oversee zone designation and permitting, as well as to manage a dedicated fund that will be established to create a funding pool for the new SEZs, as well as support some of the possible future incentives. No value was attributed to the fund, which will probably be capitalised through the Budget. [ADD PIC OF ROB DAVIES]

IT SERVICES SPEND TO EXCEED R40bn IN 2012 – The information technology (IT) services market in South Africa has seen healthy uptake, growing some 8% year-on-year in 2010, to contribute more than a third of the total IT spending in the country, market research and advisory company International Data Corporation (IDC) says. The company expects the IT services market to exceed $5-billion, or R40-billion, in 2012. “After the freeze in IT budgets that came about as a result of the global economic crisis, 2010 saw a rebound in IT services spending. “The growth in IT services spending was driven by a recovering economy, increased business confidence, expanding bandwidth availability, and various infrastructure investments made in the country in 2010,” says IDC South Africa IT services research analyst Suzanne Nolan. In a recent research report, IDC states that IT outsourcing constitutes about 40% of the South African IT services market, which represents the largest market share of all IT services foundation markets, followed by systems integration and installation and support services. “This growth was mainly driven by discrete managed services rather than by traditional information system outsourcing contracts. “The healthy growth in outsourcing services signifies a level of sophistication and maturity within the IT services segment,” Nolan adds. Further, IDC states that services, such as network and desktop outsourcing and infrastructure hosting, saw increased uptake in 2010, fuelled by the incremental supply of data centre space and increased customer awareness of the managed services model.

SA NEEDS TRANSPARENT, PREDICTABLE POLICIES – SACCI – The South African Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Sacci) has expressed concern about South Africa’s credit rating outlook, which was lowered from stable to negative. Fitch Ratings downgraded South Africa’s long-term foreign credit rating outlook citing limited progress with issues such as chronic unemployment. The outlook downgrade comes a year after South Africa achieved its stable outlook. “South Africa needs to increase the rate of investment, savings and job creation. It is also paramount that economic policies be transparent, predictable, consistent with future debt sustainability and supportive of business growth,” says Sacci CEO Neren Rau. He adds that strong rigidities in the labour market contributed to jobless growth, increasing pressure on social spending and grants. This is despite the National Treasury’s aim of changing the country’s composition of expenditure away from consumption. While Fitch sees the threat of nationalisation as “remote”, it states that the debate has upset investor confidence and warns that steps to nationalise mining assets could have “immediate and negative consequences” for the country’s rating.

Africa & the world

INTERNET GROWTH STRONG IN AFRICA – Internet use in Africa has seen unprecedented growth over the last decade, coming in at 2 000%, well over the global average of 480%, owing largely to significant information technology (IT) developments in Africa in recent years, reports market research company Frost & Sullivan information and communication technology (ICT) business unit leader for Africa Birgitta Cederstrom. This is despite Internet penetration on the African continent being relatively low compared to the developed world, with an estimated 120-million users. Cederstrom says that the more mature markets in Africa, such as South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria and Egypt, are experiencing the most growth. “With the new undersea cables and terrestrial fibre roll-out, as well as the satellite influx across Africa, we expect to see close to double-digits in terms of growth in the more mature markets over the next two to three years,” she adds. She attributes the growth to IT infrastructure developments, such as cable systems in East Africa that have boosted the region’s Internet use. Undersea fibre-optic cable network operator Seacom recently announced that in 2012, it will upgrade its East African submarine cable and increase capacity to meet rising demand from the African continent. Cederstrom says that, over the next two years, initiatives that will connect West Africa will rise in numbers, increasing the international bandwidth by triple digits. [ADD PIC OF AFRICA]

CHINA OUTBOUND DEALS TO GROW DOUBLE DIGITS IN 2012 – PwC – China’s overseas acquisitions, which reached a record in 2011, will continue double-digit growth this year as increasingly sophisticated Chinese buyers seek bargains amid the global downturn, says consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). China’s outbound investments have grown steadily in the aftermath of the 2007/8 global financial crisis, with most deals targeting resource-rich regions, but there has been a surge of Chinese interest since last year in Europe in the industrial and consumer sectors, a trend that PwC says would likely continue. “The eurozone debt crisis has definitely created opportunities for Chinese companies, giving them easier access to the European market,” Gabriel Wong, head of PwC China Corporate Finance told Reuters in an interview. “I believe it’s just a start.” Europe emerged as a key destination for Chinese acquisitions in 2011, with the number of deals in the region surging 76% to 44, many in the industrial and consumer sectors, according to Thomson Reuters data. Last year also saw record China outbound activity, with the number of deals up 10% at 207 with combined value rising 12% to $42.9-billion. Some high profile deals announced last year include China’s Investment Corp’s (CIC) $4.2-billion investment in French utility GDF Suez and Yanzhou Coal Mining Co Ltd’s $2.05-billion bid for Australia’s Gloucester Coal.

Source:http://www.engineeringnews.co.za/article/a-review-of-real-economic-developments-across-sa-africa-and-the-world-2012-01-27

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Business services may drive economic growth

December 20th, 2011

RAPID growth in the business services sector offers hope for the UK’s economic recovery, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) argued yesterday – but the think-tank also warned a Eurozone recession could cost the UK 70,000 jobs in the industry.

Business outsourcing is forecast to help IT services to grow by 13.6 per cent by 2016, the Cebr said. Management consultancy may grow by 19.1 per cent, and legal and accounting services could see turnover rise by 10.6 per cent.

However , a Eurozone meltdown could stop this recovery in its tracks, cutting spending by 1.6 per cent and destroying 70,000 jobs, the think-tank claimed.

“Demand for business services is expected to grow healthily as UK retailers and manufacturers in particular, look to streamline their business models in today’s tough climate,” said Cebr economist Rob Harbron. “However, a recession in the Eurozone is not good for UK exporters nor the business service firms which rely on their success.”

Source:http://www.cityam.com/news-and-analysis/business-services-may-drive-economic-growth

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RPT-UPDATE 2-India’s TCS flags economic uncertainty; Q2 profit rises

October 18th, 2011

India’s top software exporter Tata Consultancy Services said it does not expect to increase its prices in the near term due to global economic uncertainty, after posting a slightly lower-than-expected 14.7 percent rise in quarterly net profit.

India’s showpiece $76 billion industry gets more than 90 percent of its revenue from providing technology services to overseas clients and counts the United States and Europe as its biggest markets.

Europe is the second largest market for the software firms, and the euro zone debt crisis is a worry for the sector that has been looking to increase its sales to the region to hedge against their excessive exposure to the United States.

“If the global economic situation worsens, the sector could see a temporary blip with customers opting to suspend technology spending,” said Eric Mookherjee, the Paris-based chairman of Shanti India fund.

“I see no reason for the healthy demand momentum not to continue in the medium to long term as companies will continue to looks at ways to cut costs,” said Mookherjee, whose fund owns TCS and No.2 software exporter Infosys shares.

TCS Chief Executive Officer N. Chandrasekaran said there were “ambiguities in the external environment in the short term” but the company had not yet seen any project cancellations or cutback in client spending on technology.

“Even though the macro uncertainty continues and there is a lot of negativism, we are getting positive vibes from customers in terms of their IT spend going forward,” Chandrasekaran said, adding the firm was eyeing at least 10 large deals currently.

TCS added 12,580 staff in the July-September quarter, its strongest pace of addition in two years, and retained its forecast of adding 60,000 employees in this fiscal year, underscoring hopes of strong outsourcing demand.

TCS and its local rivals, who provide a host of IT services to Fortune 500 firms, face stiff competition from global players including IBM and Accenture for large outsourcing deals from global corporations.

Chandrasekaran said the company saw a marginal decrease in second-quarter prices, and billing rates were unlikely to go up in the near term due to the negative macro environment.

“Volumes are quite good. Pricing (increase) may be delayed because macro uncertainty has gotten worse,” he said.

Infosys, seen as a trend-setter for the sector, last week reported a 9.7-percent rise in second-quarter profit, roughly in line with estimates, easing worries of a slowdown in the outsourcing sector due to economic concerns.

Third-ranked Wipro is expected to report a 0.7 percent drop in its quarterly net profit on Oct. 31.

PROFIT RISES

TCS, a unit of the salt-to-steel conglomerate Tata Group, said its fiscal second-quarter net profit rose to 24.39 billion rupees ($498 million) in accordance with international financial reporting standards, from 21.26 billion a year ago.

Revenue rose by a quarter to 116.34 billion rupees, as it added 35 new clients in the period to take the tally to 1,010.

This compares with a Reuters poll forecast of 24.77 billion rupees in profit and revenue of 117.05 billion rupees for the company, whose major clients include Citigroup , General Electric , British Airways and Sony .

The company reported a 195 basis point drop in its profit margins from a year ago to 21 percent in the quarter, as the cost of hiring a large number of employees and wage hikes took their toll.

But a weaker rupee, which has fallen more than 10 percent since end July after touching the 2011 high, had a positive impact of 1.7 percent on margins in the quarter for the exporter that gets more than half its revenue from the United States.

Shares in TCS, valued at about $45 billion, closed down 1.2 percent at 1,120.25 rupees ahead of the result announcement in a Mumbai market that closed 0.27 percent down. ($1=48.95 rupees) (Additional reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Aradhana Aravindan)

Source:http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/10/18/tataconsultancy-results-idINL3E7LI08K20111018?type=marketsNews

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Economic Slowdown might hamper IT hiring

October 3rd, 2011

Downgrade of US debt rating and debt crisis in Euro zone will impact recruitment in the Indian IT sector and hiringhiring is expected to go down by about 30 per cent, says ASSOCHASM

Major business process outsourcing (BPO) and information technology (IT) companies, mostly from the IT hub Bangalore and the NCR are jittery amidst fears of another economic slump in the United States (US) and a debt crisis in Europe, according to a survey by the apex industry body the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM).

“US and Europe account for over 80 per cent of India’s 60 billion dollar IT industry and macro economic uncertainty in these parts of the world are bound to make the market gloomy,” said D.S. Rawat, secretary general, ASSOCHAM survey.

ASSOCHAM interacted with about 140 representatives, directors, CEOs, CFOs, Chairmen, MDs of leading companies offering IT/ITes and BPO, BTO, KPO services in various domains like pharma, (Banking, Financial Services and Insurance), auto, FMCG and manufacturing to ascertain the mood of the industry in wake of recent trouble in the US economy and gauge their extent of preparedness to deal with the crisis.

During the survey, ASSOCHASM covered prominent IT destination in India including Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chandigarh, Chennai, National Capital Region (Gurgaon and Noida), Hyderabad and Pune.

About 55 percent IT representatives from these hubs believed that currently the domestic sector is unfazed from S&P’s downgrade of the US’ credit rating and stated that the slowdown is temporary but will surely hamper the hiring activity across the sector.

On the other hand, about 25 per cent said that current round of global economic crisis won’t have much of an impact on India considering the strong domestic demand of goods and services together with their exposure to other avenues like Asia-Pacific and other parts of the world.

According to 20 percent of representatives, Indian firms may report sluggish business during the course of next few months due to the slowdown besides, the industry is already reeling under high interest costs, high inflation and the stock market is also in a sombre mood.

Over half of the respondents predicted that US economy will plunge into another recession and majority of these said that Indian companies are cautious and well prepared to deal with an economic slowdown in US, according to the ASSOCHAM survey.

“Downgrade of US debt rating and debt crisis in Euro zone will impact recruitments in the Indian IT sector and hiring is expected to go down by about 30 per cent during the course of next few months. Apart from slowdown in foreign direct investment (FDI) growth in exports and domestic private consumption might also slump,” said Rawat.

Source:http://news.in.msn.com/technology/article.aspx?cp-documentid=5479769

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Outsourcing Will Continue To Grow Despite Economic Slowdown

September 30th, 2011

There is good news and there is bad news. The bad news is that the threat of another economic recession is looming large. The good news is that there is a way to beat it – by outsourcing.

Outsourcing may just be the panacea to beat the evils of the global economic meltdown. And that is why the outsourcing industry will continue to grow despite the recession.

So, how will outsourcing help an organization to not get negatively impacted by the storms of recession?

1. The advantage of cost savings will be the biggest draw. One of the main reasons why companies outsource their business functions is to avail the benefits of cost savings – lowered operational costs, employee maintenance cost, and a host of other overhead expenses and no payment of taxes in the country of residence.

2. Outsourcing to a remote staffing company like VirtualEmployee.com has the added advantage of having a dedicated, full-time employee work for the organization. Contracting with freelancers may not be the best thing during an economic meltdown as there is always an element of risk involved. However, working with a virtual employee, who operates out of the controlled office environment of a service provider, can prove to be a huge asset in economically trying times.

3. Work does get hampered if it is outsourced. Often forced lay-offs mean a significant slowdown of an ongoing project. When work is outsourced to a vendor thousands of miles away and at a fraction of what it would cost back in the home country, such concerns about the timeline become irrelevant. This is because the outsourcing vendor’s employee will do the job they have been assigned to do and, recession or no recession, your work will be completed and delivered.

4. There is no pressure or compulsion to lay off people. By already having achieved substantial savings because of outsourcing, finances have not been as depleted as they could have been otherwise.

Recession may be looming large but if companies continue to outsource, there is every chance that they will beat this economic slowdown as well.

Source:http://www.marketpressrelease.com/Outsourcing-Will-Continue-To-Grow-Despite-Economic-Slowdown-1317186589.html

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Wipro BPO sees no major impact of global economic uncertainty

August 24th, 2011

Wipro BPO, the business process outsourcing arm of Wipro Technologies, on Tuesday said it does not see any major impact of global economic uncertainty on the sector.

“We don’t see any major impact in the near future (because of economic uncertainty),” Wipro BPO Business Technology Officer Nithya Ramkumar told reporters on the sidelines of Nassocom BPO Strategy Summit 2011.

She added that this also opens up opportunities for the BPO sector.

“BPO sector is usually a laggard (when it comes to seeing an impact of the economic slowdown) … Economic slowdown also leads to a lot of opportunities,” Ramkumar added.

Fears of another financial crisis in major markets like the US and Europe has raised concerns of clients cutting their IT budgets, which would impact Indian companies in a major way.

Major Indian IT companies earn more than half of their revenues from overseas markets, mainly the US and Europe.

Earlier this month, ratings agency S&P downgraded the US credit rating, which heightened concerns about the fallout of the global turmoil on the Indian IT industry.

Software body Nasscom has, however, exuded confidence that the Indian IT industry would meet growth target of 16-18 per cent growth this fiscal.

“A lot would depend on how companies position themselves. Companies look at outsourcing not just for cost optimisation but also increasing efficiencies. So, such economic conditions actually bring in opportunities for companies like us,” WNS Global Services Group CEO Keshav Murugesh said.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/ites/wipro-bpo-sees-no-major-impact-of-global-economic-uncertainty/articleshow/9710076.cms

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IT-enabled industries fuel economic growth in Central Visayas – NEDA

June 29th, 2011

The Information Technology (IT)-enabled industry particularly business process outsourcing (BPO), propelled the economic growth of Central Visayas in 2010 and continues to do so to date.

Other growth drivers of the region’s economy last year include construction and real estate, tourism, retail trade and the banking sector.

This was according to the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA-7) report which was presented during the recent full council meeting of the Central Visayas Regional Development Council held in the Montebello Garden Hotel, in Mabolo, Cebu City .

Said report indicated that the BPO industry in the region has been steadily expanding over the years and today, it remains ‘one of the biggest’ generator of investments and employment in Central Visayas.

Aside from the entry of new players in the BPO industry, 2010 also saw the expansion of existing companies such as Aegis People Support, Epson, Teletech, Convergys, Qualfon, Accenture and Exist Global, the report said.

Last year, the volume of business and the number of corporate clients served by IT and BPO companies have increased. Many US-based companies, including small and medium scale, have switched to outsourcing their operations to cut down on operational costs.

The 2010 regional economic situationer (RES) further reports that the expansion of the IT, IT-enabled industry and BPO operations in the region have resulted to a higher demand for office space.

This has paved the way for more investments in real estate, with investors taking advantage of such growing demand by constructing medium to high rise buildings to accommodate BPO companies.

Consequently, pointed out the NEDA 7 report, as much as 60 to a 100 percent increase were posted in industry employment.

Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/324726/itenabled-industries-fuel-economic-growth-central-visayas-neda

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