New Study Finds 14.7 Million Jobs Created Globally by Microsoft and Its EcosystemIndependent research in 82 countries and regions shows Microsoft-related businesses make more than $7 for every $1 Microsoft earns.
Global spending on information technology will create 7.1 million new jobs and 100,000 new businesses over the next four years, according to a new study by IDC. The research predicts that in 2007 Microsoft-related activities are responsible for 14.7 million jobs from an IT industry total of 35.2 million people — 42 percent of total IT employment globally in 2007 — and more than $514 billion* in tax revenue worldwide.
“Today technology is a key factor for economic, social and technological progress, and for the sustainability of economies all over the world,†said John Gantz, chief research officer at IDC. “The IDC research underscores what we’ve always known to be true: that software provides a disproportionate contribution to a vibrant IT economy. It also shows the significant contribution made by the Microsoft® ecosystem, especially in the creation of local businesses and local jobs.â€
IDC’s independent research, which was sponsored by Microsoft Corp., examined the IT industry’s impact on local job creation, company formation and tax revenues in 82 countries representing 99.5 percent of the total technology spending worldwide. IDC found that the Microsoft ecosystem — defined as people working at IT companies and IT professionals who create, sell or distribute products that run on Microsoft platforms — plays a key role in driving the IT industry’s overall contribution to job growth and economic development.
The study also found that Microsoft serves as an economic catalyst in every country in which it operates. The revenues earned by companies working with Microsoft far exceed the revenues earned by Microsoft itself. The research found that for every $1 that Microsoft earns in 2007, companies working with Microsoft will earn $7.79. In addition, according to the research findings, in 2007 more than 640,000 vendors in the Microsoft ecosystem will make more than $425 billion in revenues, and invest $100 billion in research development, marketing, sales and support in local economies.
“Information technology is the most powerful thing that has happened to mankind right now. It’s a new opportunity to change the world in a very different way,†said 2006 Nobel Prize Winner Dr. Muhammad Yunus, founder and managing director of Grameen Bank, speaking this week at Microsoft headquarters. “This is a chance for us to bring information technology to the poorest people, so the potential energy and creativity that each one of them has can be unleashed. Microsoft can play a tremendous role because they are at the top of the technology pyramid. If Microsoft puts their mind to it something dramatic can happen. This is an opportunity that we cannot ignore.â€
“IDC’s research quantifies the enormous power of software to create local jobs and grow economies around the world, in both developed and developing markets,†said Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft. “Millions of people are employed globally in Microsoft-related activities, generating more than a half-trillion dollars in taxes in 2007 for governments worldwide. Microsoft’s business model creates average revenues of more than $7 for other companies for every $1 Microsoft takes in. Countries such as China, India and Russia see earnings in excess of $16 to $1.â€
In the 82 countries and regions surveyed, the IT industry overall is expected to see continued strong growth over the next four years, generating an additional 7.1 million new jobs from a 2007 base of 35.4 million for a total of 42.5 million jobs by 2011. The No. 1 source of new IT jobs will be China, followed by the United States. In addition, the growth in the global labor force will result in new incremental tax revenues of $592 billion to governments over the next four years.
The study shows that spending on IT will reach $1.2 trillion worldwide in 2007, and is expected to grow 6.1 percent a year for the next four years, a rate twice that of the expected growth of gross domestic product worldwide. The study also found that IT spending on software creates a disproportionate share of the skilled job growth. Software drives activity in the services and distribution sectors, as well as in organizations using IT, so while worldwide spending on packaged software will be only 21 percent of total IT spending in 2007, 50 percent of employment in IT will be software-related.
Illustrating the powerful economic impact of the Microsoft ecosystem, partners all over the world are innovating and experiencing significant business growth.
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