Browse
related articles
Business Software Alliance releases report on the economic benefits of lowering PC software piracy
- United Arab Emirates: Wednesday, February 13 - 2008 at 13:59
- PRESS RELEASE
In a report releases by Business Sofware Alliance (BSA), ten point reduction in PC software piracy would deliver an additional 710 new jobs, $40m tax revenues, and $240m in economic growth in United Arab Emirates.
In 2007, United Arab Emirates, a country of more than 4 m people, spent nearly $2.7bn on information technology (IT) - computers, peripherals, network equipment, packaged software and IT services. That spending accounted for 1.5% of gross domestic product (GDP), supported more than 4,400 IT companies with nearly 33,400 IT industry employees, and helped generate $670m in IT-related taxes.
Yet the IT sector's contribution to the could be even bigger if UAE's PC software piracy rate were to be lowered 10 percentage points over the next four years, creating an additional 710 jobs, $238m in local industry revenues, and $44m in additional taxes revenues for federal, regional, and local governments. Lowering piracy in other software categories could double the economic benefits.
This incremental boost to the economy would add highly skilled jobs to the labor force, support the creation of new companies, and fund public services. Because most of the benefits accrue to services and channel firms, most of the benefits from lowering piracy stay within the country. For an economy the size of United Arab Emirates', even this small increment of IT-related employment would have an impact.
H.E. Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Alshihhi, Undersecretary - Planning Sector, UAE Ministry of Economy (MoE), commented: "Our concerted efforts in combating piracy have delivered significant positive results to the economy, particularly the sustained growth of the IT sector. The Ministry of Economy agrees with the report produced by BSA and IDC pointing out the critical importance of further lowering the UAE's piracy rate, which will be a significant step towards achieving sustainable levels of development in the future."
Lowering PC software piracy delivers such benefits because other sectors derive revenue from working with, installing, servicing, and reselling software.
Therefore, a 10 percentage point drop in PC piracy not only impacts the performance and economic contributions of the overall software industry, but also ripples outward into the IT services and distribution sectors, each of which is larger than the software industry itself.
Also consider reading:
Browse
related articles
Notes and media contacts
Study backgroundThe cornerstone of this research is IDC's Piracy Impact Model (PIM), which takes inputs from IDC's market research around the globe on IT spending and software piracy along with other information on IT employment levels and IT-related taxes. IDC has been conducting economic analysis on the impact of IT and software on local economies since 2002. Key inputs to the study include:
•IDC forecasts of IT spending by hardware, software, and services.
•IDC estimates of imports and exports of hardware, software, services.
•Macroeconomic data on GDP, workforce, population, tax rates, and total government tax receipts.
•IDC estimates of services and distribution channel activity that revolves around software.
•The annual BSA-IDC Global Software Piracy Study which estimates rates of packaged PC software piracy around the globe. The most recent version can be found at www.bsa.org/globalstudy.
For more information on the study methodology see, The Economic Benefits of Lowering PC Software Piracy: Methodology and Definitions, published in January 2008.
Copyright Notice
External Publication of IDC Information and Data — Any IDC information that is to be used in advertising, press releases, or promotional materials requires prior written approval from the appropriate IDC Vice President or Country Manager. Copyright 2008 IDC. Reproduction without written permission is forbidden.
About BSA
The Business Software Alliance is the foremost organization dedicated to promoting a safe and legal digital world. BSA is the voice of the world's commercial software industry and its hardware partners before governments and in the international marketplace. Its members represent one of the fastest growing industries in the world. BSA programs foster technology innovation through education and policy initiatives that promote copyright protection, cyber security, trade and e-commerce. BSA members include Adobe, Altium, Apple, Autodesk, Avid, Bentley Systems, Centennial Software, CNC, Corel, Enteo, Mathworks, Microsoft, Mindjet Corporation, Monotype, O&O, Quark, Siemens PLM Software, Solid Works, Staff & Line, Symantec and Tekla.
For further information contact:
Orient Planet
PR and Marketing Communications
P O Box: 23345, Dubai, UAE.
Tel: 00 971 4 3988901
Fax: 00 971 4 3988941
www.orientplanet.com
Disclaimer:
Articles in this section are primarily provided directly by the companies appearing or PR agencies which are solely responsible for the content. The companies concerned may use the above content on their respective web sites provided they link back to http://www.ameinfo.com
Any opinions, advice, statements, offers or other information expressed in this section of the AMEinfo.com Web site are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited. AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited is not responsible or liable for the content, accuracy or reliability of any material, advice, opinion or statement in this section of the AMEinfo.com Web site.
For details about submitting your stories, please read the guide - all content published is subject to our terms and conditions

Posted by Medilyn Manibo, Assistant News Editor
