Worldwide PC shipments will grow 3 percent in 2002 to 125.5 million units, faster than previous estimates of 1.8 percent growth, market researcher IDC said Wednesday.
All regions except Asia-Pacific saw faster sales growth than expected in the fourth quarter, and economic indicators in the key U.S. market have finally begun to point consistently to a recovery, IDC said.
IDC said that several trends in the fourth quarter of 2001 pointed to a PC sales recovery. These included:
In the U.S., consumer demand should recover through 2002 along with most commercial segments, IDC said, although the education market will remain weak throughout the year. The recovery in Western Europe is expected to be slower than in the U.S. because of reserved commercial spending and because the slowdown in 2001 was less dramatic.
Japan remains one of the weakest markets and overall PC shipments in Japan will see a double-digit decline in the first half of 2002 and commercial market shipments will barely show positive growth, even by the fourth quarter. Government spending will be the key to PC sales growth in Asia-Pacific, and consumer growth should recover to solid double-digit growth in the second half of the year, IDC said.
In 2001, worldwide PC shipments fell 5.2 percent below their 2000 level of 128.5 million units. This year’s 3 percent growth will be followed by a sales jump of 10.9 percent in 2003, when worldwide PC shipments will reach 139.2 million units, IDC said.