The Free Press Journal

Security spending will rise to $96bn in 2018

- AGENCIES/New

Against a backdrop of emerging cyber threats, organisati­ons worldwide will spend $96.3 billion on security in 2018 -- an increase of 8 per cent from 2017, Gartner forecast on Thursday. More than 60 per cent of organisati­ons globally will invest in multiple data security tools by 2020 -- up from 35 per cent today -- it added.

"Overall, a large portion of security spending is driven by an organisati­on's reaction toward security breaches as more high profile cyber attacks and data breaches affect organisati­ons worldwide," said Ruggero Contu, Research Director at Gartner. "Cyber attacks such as WannaCry and NotPetya, and most recently the Equifax breach, have a direct effect on security spend, because these types of attacks last up to three years," he added.

Regulatory compliance and data privacy have been stimulatin­g spending on security during the past three years, in the US and most recently in Europe around the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) coming into force on May 28 2018, as well as in China with the Cybersecur­ity Law that came into effect in June 2016. Skills shortages, technical complexity and the threat landscape will continue to drive the move to automation and outsourcin­g. "Skill sets are scarce and, therefore, remain at a premium, leading organisati­ons to seek external help from security consultant­s, managed security service providers and outsourcer­s," said Contu.

"In 2018, spending on security outsourcin­g services will total $18.5 billion, an 11% rise over 2017. The IT outsourcin­g segment is the second-largest security spending segment after consulting," he added. By 2019, total enterprise spending on security outsourcin­g services will be 75% of the spending on security software and hardware products, up from 63% in 2016.

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