NEW - IDC WebcastFree E-NewslettersRSS Feeds | Site Map
Security Resource CentreBusiness Value of TechnologyMunicipal Centre
SearchSearch
Tips
Technology
Slice by Program

U.S. government IT spending on the rise, according to report

By: Grant Gross, IDG News Service (Washington Bureau)(08-24-2007)

The U.S. government will spend close to US$22 billion on IT projects by the end of September, as agencies rush to spend their budgets by the end of the fiscal year, says a report from Input, an analyst focused on government contracts.

Input expects U.S. government agencies to spend 33 per cent of their IT budgets in the quarter that ends Sept. 30, Input said in a report released this week. In the last 10 years, agency IT spending has increasingly shifted to the fourth quarter of the government's fiscal year as agencies scramble to use up budgets, the Input report said.

"Agencies are instilled with a use-it-or-lose-it mentality that drives them to spend their remaining budgets before the end of the year," said report author John Slye, manager of federal industry analysis for Input.

About $17 billion of the projected $22 billion in IT spending will come from 10 large agencies, Input said. The Army, Air Force and Navy will each spend more than $2.2 billion this quarter, while the Department of Health and Human Services will spend $1.9 billion and the Department of Homeland Security will spend $1.7 billion, according to Input's projections.

In addition, Congress has been increasingly unable to approve agency budgets by the start of the new fiscal year, and agencies have operated under temporary spending authority called continuing resolutions, the report said. "Operating under a [continuing resolution], if even briefly, limits the ability of these agencies to move forward on their planned IT investments," the report said.

Bill Vass, president and chief operating officer of Sun Microsystems Federal Inc., agreed that the slow budgeting process causes delays. "A lot of them don't know what their budgets will be," he said. "You have to be able to execute really quickly when they finally get the money."

From 1997 to 2000, agencies spent about 28 per cent of their IT budgets in their fourth quarter, and in 2005 and 2006, they spent 34 per cent, said the report. Input didn't have spending numbers available for past years, but the trend toward delaying spending and growing IT budgets could mean this will be a record quarter for government IT spending, Slye said.

The first and third quarters of the U.S. government's fiscal year are becoming slower periods for federal IT spending, Slye said. In 2005 and 2006, agencies spent just over 20 per cent of their IT budgets in each of those quarters, the Input report said.

Smart IT vendors are already aware of the government's spending cycles, Slye said. Some vendors have government purchasing agents working around the clock in August and September, he said. "The vendor community has been servicing the need," he said.

Sun Microsystems Federal works especially hard to close government deals in August and September, Vass said.

"We do business calls on Sunday," he said. "We jump through hoops on weekends and holidaysb&to get deals signed and help the government work it through their bureaucracy."

In addition to working long hours at the end of the government's fiscal year, Sun employees focus on selling products that help agencies consolidate hardware or run systems through virtualization technology, Vass said. Those types of deals can help government agencies with tight budgets save operating costs and pour the savings into new IT projects, he said.

Input advised vendors to focus on building relationships with government agencies during the slow first and third quarters. Vendors should adjust their sales projections to compensate for the cyclic government spending, and they should target agencies that can use their products during the fourth quarter, Input said.

Related content:

CIOs spill secrets for innovative IT

Spiralling costs tip scales of Libra justice system

Opinion: The cost of compliance

Report knocks Treasury Department for IT spending

What is up with IT spending in 2007?

U.S. government IT spend to plummet

Bookmark on:del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article?
Add a new commentLetter to the Editor
Find an inappropriate comment? You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields
Blog Spotlight: Sandford Borins
Sandford Borins

As Professor of Strategic Management at the University of Toronto, Sandford Borins brings InterGovWorld.com readers exclusive insights into how and why the public sector is changing. You'll find new perspectives and questions, observations and objectives, lessons and answers. Cover to Cover, the blog by Prof. Sandford Borins, appears every Thursday.

Inside Cover to Cover

Unified Communications
Data Defence

Unity is a word often heard in the public sector, with myriad agencies and departments looking to foster collective thinking around some of today's most pressing issues. The word, however, doesn't usually get mentioned in the same breath as technology. That's a situation, though, that might soon be changing, thanks to a new software platform known as unified communications.

Inside the latest issue of CGR

More Resources
Driving innovation through effective service management
This white paper discusses how a service-oriented governance framework can help ensure that IT decisions are consistent with business vision, values and strategies-and that IT delivers maximum value to the business. Complimentary with registration.
IT Service Management Solutions and the service desk
This white paper presents the capabilities of IBM Tivoli CCMDB, and describes how Tivoli CCMDB extends the value of the service desk and integrates other essential ITIL processes in support of IBM Service Management. Complimentary with registration.
Info-Tech Research Note: WAN Optimization Tools worth the investment
Multi-site enterprises experiencing WAN bandwidth demand growth and struggling to maintain acceptable application performance should evaluate WAN optimization technology immediately. WAN optimization appliances can dramatically improve inter-site WAN performance, reduce bandwidth requirements, and allow for server centralization. For many enterprises a positive ROI can be achieved in less than a year. Download this research note now. Complimentary with registration.
Advertisement
2007 Salary Calculator
Knowledge Centres at a Glance
White Papers
read more white papers
New blog entries
Thoughts of the day
This week's top stories
Most popular stories of the week
Readers write back
Comments from Intergovworld readers
Government to government
Inside the public sector machine
Government to business
P3: Public-private partnerships
Government to citizen
e-Government service transformation
Blogs
Browse Blogs By:
WiFi Hot Spot Finder
Upload Centre
Upload Your Documents
Contribute and share with your peers by uploading:
- Initiative updates
- White Papers
- Job Links
- Events
- Other
Download Centre
Most popular downloads:
Download More Documents
Download:
- Initiative updates
- White Papers
- Job Links
Subscription Services
Manage your InterGovWorld.com account!
Change your account information, password, e-mail address, and existing e-newsletter subscriptions.
Site Feedback Survey
Tell us what you think of InterGovWorld.com!
FUN SurveyFUN Survey
Take the one-minute Family Unit Networking survey!
IT Salary Survey IT Salary Survey
Take the IT Salary Survey '06 Today
Career Resources
InterGovWorld provides links to resources for government job seekers and current employees, including: current job postings, job search strategies, career options and training, and employee rights, provided by all levels of government from everywhere across Canada.

Public Service Commission of Canada
Service Canada
Jobs in Canada
Service Canada
Public Service Human Resources Management Agency of Canada