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Manufacturing
spending more on IT, while capex falls
07.07.2003
IT spending by manufacturers in the UK, currently facing
their toughest times, is holding up and set to grow
early next year. That's the surprise headline finding
of Benchmark Research's latest study.
The firm finds overall investment in IT declined 3.4%
between 2001 and 2002, and forecasts a further 1.6%
cut this year to £2.92bn before next year's
upturn, despite industry currently continuing to
shrink.
The
figures couldn't be in sharper contrast to the
massive decline in capital equipment - machine
tools and the rest - falling from a high in 1998
of just
over £17bn to £12.5bn last year. 2002
alone witnessed a 15% decline, according to the
Manufacturing Technologies Association.
Benchmark,
which has been monitoring the manufacturing
IT market successfully for more than 15 years,
comments that spending in 2002 will in fact be
greater, in real
terms, than in 1998 when most industries were
in growth mode.
The
firm also says that whereas from 1993 to 1998, industry
spent between 1.6 and 1.7%
of
its GDP
on IT, that rose to a high of 2.1% in 2000
and has slipped
back to 1.9% now.
If
Ernst & Young's recent
encouraging assessment of the outlook for
manufacturing and engineering (with
UK production output predicted to rise 2.9%
in 2004 on the back of renewed growth and
exchange rate improvements)
is well founded, Benchmark's forecast could
be on the modest side.
It's
hard to escape the conclusion that British manufacturing
not only
recognises IT as a
prerequisite for business,
but that it is coming to perceive it as
a preferred route to today's business objectives
of cost
cutting, efficiencies and increasing flexibility.
Benchmark
says preferred IT investments are likely to remain
essentially tactical,
with
justification
in fast return on investment and tight
links to existing business needs. The
company also
reports
that business
managers are increasingly taking responsibility,
with IT managers providing the enabling
role.
Again
surprisingly, the company suggests that of the ERP
'add-ons', most favoured
for priority
spending
is shop floor data collection after
ERP/MRP upgrades, integration and better stock
control. Other add-ons
like business intelligence, work in
progress tracking, modern scheduling and CRM (customer
relationship
management)
are lower down the pecking order -
implying
a worrying misunderstanding of best
gains by managers
in industry. " |