Tech's stimulus boost

Technology companies are positioning themselves to profit from stimulus packages around the world.

By Jon Fortt, senior writer

Fortune Magazine

Last Updated: March 11, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO (Fortune) -- Here's one group you won't hear complaining too bitterly about government spending: Tech executives.

They may be deficit hawks when it comes to their own balance sheets, but leaders of the largest technology companies these days are positioning global stimulus packages - including the Obama administration's $787 billion stimulus plan - as a necessary evil. And while they're careful to avoid promoting any particular political ideology, there's a common refrain among them that with the economy in such rough shape and with customers afraid to spend, it's only natural for governments to step up.

0:00 /3:16Stimulus or bust

Take IBM (IBM, Fortune 500). The company estimates that worldwide, governments so far have committed to spend $3.5 trillion in stimulus dollars. Executives figure a good portion of that money will fund projects like smarter electric grids, improved broadband services and digitized healthcare records - areas where IBM happens to market its technology and expertise.

The company is actively preparing to bid for the work. Big Blue already has employees in dozens of countries scouting out the best stimulus opportunities, and figuring out how the company might fit in. The government push goes all the way to the top: In January IBM CEO Sam Palmisano told the incoming Obama administration he believes $30 billion worth of government spending on the right tech projects could yield jobs for more than 900,000 U.S. workers.

The corporate perspective is perhaps more pragmatic than the partisan back-and-forth in Washington. Several executives say government spending is an important way to speed a recovery, but it's not a long-term solution. "It's going to be the governments who set the table for a recovery," says Bob Samson, general manager of IBM's public sector business. "Once that table is set, the enormous creativity and innovation in the private sector can take hold."

What about charges that big stimulus packages are thinly disguised socialism? "This isn't socialism, it's government's job," Samson says. "In every great economic crisis, that's what governments have done." (While that may be true, it's always been controversial, too. Around the time when Roosevelt made Depression-era plans to expand the highway system, one critic accused him of a power grab that would "Hitlerize what was once democratic self-government.")

IBM will have plenty of competition for government contracts. When Hewlett-Packard (HPQ, Fortune 500) bought outsourcing giant EDS last year, it also inherited a $2.5 billion federal government business. Ann Livermore, executive vice president of Hewlett-Packard's Technology Solutions Group, doesn't expect that kind of business to let up. "We see, over the next couple of years, governments around the world being one of the larger spenders on IT," she says. "We certainly see governments on an international basis spending for services that they think will stimulate the economy and stimulate growth." One hot area in her sights: healthcare data.

Still, executives sounded a note of concern that governments shouldn't get carried away with spending - even if it's on their technology. "It looks like government's the only game in town, but I don't think it's a good game. It's OK for the short term - but government spending has to be paid off in higher taxes," says Joe Tucci, CEO of storage and security company EMC (EMC, Fortune 500).

That said, Tucci sees the logic behind some government stimulus packages. "I do think without the stimulus in the early innings, we'd be in this mess for a much longer time." To top of page