{"id":101,"date":"2000-10-04T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2000-10-04T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.asbis.com\/news\/?p=101"},"modified":"2023-07-28T14:54:25","modified_gmt":"2023-07-28T14:54:25","slug":"asbis-in-ft-special-report","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news.asbis.com\/news\/media\/asbis-in-ft-special-report\/","title":{"rendered":"ASBIS in FT special report: Infrastructure and politics hinder the region&apos;s online advance"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;<P><EM>By Stefan &#13;&#10;Wagstyl<BR><\/EM><EM> &#13;&#10;      Published: October 3 2000 15:36GMT&nbsp;<\/EM>           &#13;&#10;<BR>&nbsp;<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;<BR>The Czech branch of First Tuesday, the &#13;&#10;global internet club, looks little different from its counterparts around the &#13;&#10;world. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>At a recent meeting at the Fromin nightclub in central Prague beer, wine and &#13;&#10;conversation flowed freely as three companies presented their wares: Globopolis, &#13;&#10;a web-based travel guide, Samba, an internet design office, and Penize.cz, a &#13;&#10;personal finance portal. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>About 300 people stood around the dance floor, as entrepreneurs and would-be &#13;&#10;entrepreneurs mixed with financiers, consultants and hangers-on of all kinds. &#13;&#10;&#8217;This is the place to be,&#8217; says Tomas Prouza, editor of Penize, who had just &#13;&#10;given up a regular newspaper job to work on the web. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Prague First Tuesday is one side of the information technology industry in &#13;&#10;central and eastern Europe. The other are the millions of people who have yet to &#13;&#10;see a telephone line in their homes. A region which boasts some of the world&apos;s &#13;&#10;most advanced software companies is also home to some of the most &#13;&#10;technologically-backward districts in Europe. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>While mobile phone companies in the cities of Budapest, Prague and Warsaw &#13;&#10;have introduced internet services sooner than those in some European Union &#13;&#10;capitals, central Europe as a whole is perhaps three to five years behind &#13;&#10;western Europe in the spread of mobile telephone networks. Russia, outside the &#13;&#10;fast-moving metropolis of Moscow, is further behind still. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Yet the information technology gap between west and east Europe is closing. &#13;&#10;Economic convergence is steadily bringing the Continent&apos;s two halves together. &#13;&#10;So is the need to prepare for EU accession and compete in international markets. &#13;&#10;<\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>As well as needing to invest to catch up with the west after decades of &#13;&#10;stagnation under Communism, the region is flush with enthusiasm for new &#13;&#10;technology. Moritz Gerke, executive vice president of Deutsche Telekom, the &#13;&#10;German telecoms group which is investing heavily in central and eastern Europe, &#13;&#10;says: &#8216;Spending on telecoms is growing much faster than GDP. People put a &#13;&#10;priority on telecoms and are prepared to spend more of their money on it than &#13;&#10;people in the EU.&#8217; While the telecoms market is not the same as the IT market, &#13;&#10;the two overlap extensively. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>However, enthusiasm for high technology is not enough to drive markets. Users &#13;&#10;also need the wherewithal. Even in the region&apos;s richest states &#8211; the Czech &#13;&#10;Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia &#8211; incomes per head are only &#13;&#10;about 40 per cent of EU average levels when adjusted for purchasing power. Steve &#13;&#10;Frantzen, managing director of the central Europe business of International Data &#13;&#10;Corporation, the IT market research company, says the most important influence &#13;&#10;on demand for information technology products and services are the ups and downs &#13;&#10;of the economy. In comparison, the effect of all &#8216;the internet hype&#8217; is &#13;&#10;negligible, he says. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<IMG alt='ASBIS in FT special report: Infrastructure and politics hinder the reg' src='http:\/\/value4it.com\/attach\/get\/20070207093710383795000000.gif' border='0'>&#13;&#10;<P><BR>IDC expects the region&apos;s IT market, worth about $10bn this year, to grow &#13;&#10;at about 15 per cent annually. Industry executives say the communications &#13;&#10;market, which is worth about a further $25bn, including equipment and services, &#13;&#10;is expanding at a similar rate. This compares with growth rates of under 10 per &#13;&#10;cent in western Europe. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>The principal force driving demand will be economic growth. Central and &#13;&#10;eastern Europe, including Russia, is expected to grow by more than 4 per cent in &#13;&#10;GDP terms this year, significantly faster than the EU, with about 3 per cent. &#13;&#10;<\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>At the same time, the former Communist states are expected to invest a &#13;&#10;growing proportion of their income in IT. According to IDC, the countries of &#13;&#10;central and eastern Europe have already reached EU levels of investment relative &#13;&#10;to the size of their economies, spending 2.2-2.6 per cent of GDP on IT, compared &#13;&#10;with an average of 2.5 per cent in the EU. The figure could reach 3 per cent in &#13;&#10;coming years, provided economic growth continues and if a recent surge in &#13;&#10;investment spreads from government institutions and large companies to smaller &#13;&#10;businesses. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>The integration of the region into the world economy is also contributing to &#13;&#10;IT investment. Multinational companies are the main engine behind this &#13;&#10;integration, building computer and communications systems of their own and &#13;&#10;encouraging investment by network providers. For example, Cisco Systems, the &#13;&#10;internet technology company, says one of its largest contracts in Europe is an &#13;&#10;order from the Russian railways ministry which is building communications links &#13;&#10;alongside its tracks. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>EU accession is playing its part, particularly in those countries in central &#13;&#10;Europe which hope to join the union in the next few years. Governments are &#13;&#10;investing to upgrade to EU standards everything from statistics offices to &#13;&#10;veterinary laboratories. Companies are introducing sophisticated systems to &#13;&#10;raise quality control to EU levels. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Central and east Europeans are also preparing themselves for international &#13;&#10;integration via education. People who have long enjoyed high levels of literacy &#13;&#10;and numeracy now want top-class IT training. This thirst for knowledge creates &#13;&#10;both a demand for high-tech educational services and a supply of well-trained &#13;&#10;computer staff. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Bob Agee, general manager for the region at Cisco, says: &#8216;People in these &#13;&#10;countries want to learn, whatever the problems they have.&#8217; Cisco sponsors &#13;&#10;technology training centres in most European countries. The second largest, with &#13;&#10;70 sites, is in Romania. Only the UK has more. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>As elsewhere, technological change also drives investment. Walid Moneimne, &#13;&#10;managing director of business development at Compaq, the US computer maker, says &#13;&#10;the convergence of the computer, consumer electronic, media, communications and &#13;&#10;internet industries is creating demand for new products and services. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>In some cases, central and eastern Europe&apos;s relative backwardness actually &#13;&#10;creates opportunities for more rapid development than in the EU. For example, &#13;&#10;central and east European banks do not waste time like some of their western &#13;&#10;counterparts trying to marry new technology with existing computer systems &#13;&#10;dating back to the 1960s. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>The slower introduction of some new technologies also gives scope for &#13;&#10;leap-frogging developments in the west. Izzet Guney, telecoms specialist at the &#13;&#10;European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, says the mobile telephone &#13;&#10;networks of Moscow, Warsaw and Budapest are more advanced than networks in west &#13;&#10;European cities because they were installed a few years later. As a result they &#13;&#10;are more suitable for mobile net-linked services. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>However, amid all the forces driving forward IT investment, the region also &#13;&#10;has some significant barriers to overcome. First, is the relatively low income &#13;&#10;level. At current rates of economic progress, it will take 10-20 years for even &#13;&#10;the richest former Communist states &#8211; those in central Europe &#8211; to reach EU &#13;&#10;income levels. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Jan Winkler, an executive with Andersen Consulting, the management &#13;&#10;consultancy in Prague, says: &#8216;With average salaries at about Kc15,000 a month, &#13;&#10;and a basic PC costing Kc30,000, computers are too expensive for people to buy &#13;&#10;for themselves.&#8217; <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Despite the impressive growth of the past decade, the region&apos;s IT and &#13;&#10;communications markets are about 5 per cent the size of western Europe&apos;s, &#13;&#10;according to IDC. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Computers will spread across the region. But they will more likely be &#13;&#10;installed where they can be shared &#8211; in offices, schools and public buildings &#13;&#10;rather than private houses. While international company offices may soon match &#13;&#10;EU levels in IT investment per worker, small businesses will be far behind their &#13;&#10;western counterparts. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>A second potential obstacle is government policy. As in the EU, many states &#13;&#10;are deregulating telecommunications in ways which gives advantages to the &#13;&#10;incumbent utility, usually the former national monopoly. Red tape and high costs &#13;&#10;will slow growth, particularly in communications-linked services, such as the &#13;&#10;internet. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>A third limitation to IT investment is the region&apos;s poor infrastructure. Only &#13;&#10;about one third of homes have a telephone. Roads are poor and railways slow. &#13;&#10;Companies which waste time and money trying to communicate with telephone-less &#13;&#10;customers or deliver orders to inaccessible places have less to spend on &#13;&#10;information technology. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>In general, the difficulties are greater in the former Soviet Union, &#13;&#10;including Russia, than in the fast-growing countries of central Europe. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>The Baltic states have developed exceptionally fast, helped by investment &#13;&#10;from technology-friendly Scandinavia. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>The Balkans have been held back by war and slow economic liberalisation but &#13;&#10;some countries, notably Bulgaria, are trying to make up for lost time by rapid &#13;&#10;investment. <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Everywhere, the big hope is that entrepreneurial companies, local and &#13;&#10;international, will focus on the potential rewards rather than the problems. &#13;&#10;<\/P>&#13;&#10;<P><STRONG>Sergey Kostevich, president of Asbis, a &#13;&#10;Cyprus-based component distributor, says: <EM>&#8216;The demand is there. It is just a &#13;&#10;question of fulfilling it.&#8217; <\/EM><\/STRONG>         &#13;&#10;             <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P><STRONG>Mr Kostevich, a Belarusian academic researcher, &#13;&#10;is an example of entrepreneurial drive. He started his business supplying &#13;&#10;friends and acquaintances in Minsk. Now he employs 280 in a region-wide network &#13;&#10;which is this year forecast to have a turnover of $260m. <\/STRONG>          &#13;&#10;         &#13;&#10;             &#13;&#10;         <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P><STRONG>The region is increasingly attracting the biggest &#13;&#10;international IT suppliers, including IBM, Microsoft and Intel. These are &#13;&#10;gradually winning market share from local companies, particularly in hardware. &#13;&#10;<\/STRONG>          &#13;&#10;           &#13;&#10;      <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P><STRONG>In the former Soviet Union there is still a &#13;&#10;thriving industry in assembling low-cost personal computers from cheap &#13;&#10;components, but in central Europe, there is a growing preference for branded &#13;&#10;models. <\/STRONG>             &#13;&#10;           &#13;&#10;       <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P><STRONG>Local suppliers are holding their own better in &#13;&#10;software and services, where local market knowledge and language are an &#13;&#10;advantage. For example, Prokom in Poland and Synergom in Hungary have grown into &#13;&#10;substantial operations now ready to acquire local rivals.<\/STRONG>            &#13;&#10;            &#13;&#10;            &#13;&#10;    <\/P>&#13;&#10;<P>Mr Frantzen of IDC says that consolidation is already happening and forecasts &#13;&#10;there will be more to come. <BR>&nbsp;<BR><\/P>&#13;&#10;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;By Stefan &#13;&#10;Wagstyl &#13;&#10; Published: October 3 2000 15:36GMT&nbsp; &#13;&#10;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Czech branch of First Tuesday, the &#13;&#10;global internet club, looks little different from its counterparts around the &#13;&#10;world. &#13;&#10;At a recent meeting at the Fromin nightclub in central Prague beer, wine and &#13;&#10;conversation flowed freely as three companies presented their wares: Globopolis, &#13;&#10;a web-based travel&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[12],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-101","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-media"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.6 - 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