DocumentCode :
56798
Title :
Defense Budgets Shrink Technology Spending [Special Reports]
Author :
Schneiderman, Ron
Volume :
30
Issue :
2
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Mar-13
Firstpage :
10
Lastpage :
13
Abstract :
As defense budgets go, so goes a lot of spending on technology. But for most major countries, a lot of belt tightening is in the works, most notably in the United States and across Europe.Defense budget cuts are hitting prime contractors and their suppliers hard. The postelection picture in Washington and the budget crisis in Europe are making projections difficult, but the top 20 global defense and aerospace companies have already experienced a 1% decrease in global revenue in the first half of 2012-on top of the 3.3% decline in revenue in 2011. In this environment, industry is likely to pick up more of the development costs of new military systems and upgrades. The only real winners here may be commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) providers, most of which now meet military-standard (MIL-STD) and other military hardware requirements.
Keywords :
budgeting; costing; defence industry; research and development management; COTS; Europe; MIL-STD; United States; Washington; aerospace company; commercial-off-the-shelf provider; contractor; defense budget; defense company; development cost; military hardware requirements; military standard; military system; military upgrade; supplier; technology spending; Budgets; Economics; Government policies; Military equipment; US Department of Defense;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1053-5888
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MSP.2012.2229515
Filename :
6461613
Link To Document :
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