According to the latest findings by Gartner, governments in the Middle East and North Africa will spend USD 11.97 billion on IT products and services in 2015, an increase of 0.4 percent over 2014 spending of USD 11.92 billion.
This forecast includes spending on internal services, software, IT services, data centre, devices and telecom services. Government comprises local government and national government.
Telecom services, which include fixed and mobile telecom services, will be the largest overall spending category throughout the forecast period within the government sector. It is expected to be USD 5.2 billion in 2015– led by growth in mobile network services.
The software segment includes enterprise resource planning (ERP), supply chain management (SCM), customer relationship management (CRM), enterprise application software, infrastructure software and vertical specific software. Software spending will grow 6.7 per cent over the 2014 spending, to reach USD 1.2 billion. In 2015, software spending will be led by growth in the ERP, SCM, CRM and enterprise application software which includes office suites and content, communications and collaboration amongst others.
“Transition from one-way department centric eGovernment initiatives to a two-way interactive citizen centric digital government is driving spending in government IT in the region,” said Dr. Anurag Gupta, Research Vice President at Gartner. “We expect further investments in building systems for sharing data across departments with a goal of simplifying government transaction for citizens and continued investments in mobile technologies to facilitate anytime anywhere access.”
Further information on government sector IT spending is available in the Gartner report ‘Enterprise IT Spending for the Government and Education Markets, Worldwide, 2013-2019, 1Q15 Update’. The report is available on Gartner’s website at http://www.gartner.com/document/3036517.The forecasts provide total enterprise IT spending, including internal spending and multiple lines of detail for spending on hardware, software, IT services, and telecommunications for vertical industries and 43 countries within seven geographies.