Email this article   Print article 

State and Local Outsourcing to Reach $18 Billion

By Jill R. Aitoro, CRN
January 25, 2006    5:08 PM ET

State and local government spending on IT outsourcing is expected to grow $8 billion in the next five years as agencies look to the private sector to help revamp legacy infrastructures and augment staff, according to a report released by Input, a Reston, Va.-based research firm.

The report says spending on IT outsourcing by state and local government is expected to grow from $10 billion in 2005 to nearly $18 billion by 2010--despite continued arguments to the contrary.

"Various government officials, while they claim to understand the underlying reasons, say 'you might be right, but it won't be us,'" says Jim Krouse, manager of state and local market analysis at Input. "That's fine, so show me one thing you're doing that enables you to not go this route along with everyone else. I don't see it."

Specifically, Input expects agencies to outsource infrastructure needs, such as applications management, platform operations and desktop services. The outsourcing of comprehensive areas, such as business processes won't likely be as prevalent.

"When you talk about these 25-to 30-year-old legacy systems, they may need people to come in and hold it together for a while," Krouse says. "It's going to be about staff augmentation. Bringing in quality skill sets to multitask through to the next level."

Midtier state governments will continue to act as the laboratories for change, Krouse says, with Virginia already taking the lead. At the end of 2005, as part of its IT Transformation Initiative, the state selected Northrop Grumman for its 10-year $2 billion contract to create a commonwealth infrastructure, and CGI-AMS for its seven-year $300 million contract to consolidate and modernize enterprise applications in the executive branch.

"Virginia has been a leader in making sound technology investments, and this is the largest contract to date," Krouse says. "In a lot of cases, state and local governments are like lemmings--they see a leader climb and it removes the risk. All the more reason to jump in and stay on the bleeding edge."


Email this article   Print article 

More

Recent Articles

Public Display: Hot Scenes From XChange Public Sector

Hundreds of VARs, integrators, vendors and analysts descended on the Sawgrass Marriott in Jacksonville, Fla., last week for XChange Public Sector. Here's a look at what you missed if you weren't there, from heated health-care and government discussion to just plain heat.

CRN 2010 Public Sector Awards: Meet The Big Winners

CRN saluted four vendors and five VARs and integrators at XChange Public Sector in Jacksonville. Have a look at who took home the hardware this year, including Public Sector Integrator of the Year.

10 Burning Questions For The Public Sector Channel

As XChange Public Sector kicks off in Jacksonville June 12, here's a look at some of the most pressing issues for public sector VARs and integrators, from cybersecurity and firm-fixed-price contracts to green technology and small business priorities.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...