On BNET: Fix your remote like MacGyver
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

February 12th, 2009

Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan

Posted by Sam Diaz @ 5:24 am

Categories: Economy, General, Government

Tags: President, Information Technology, Stimulus Plan, Health Care, U.S. Senate, Tech Industry, Vertical Industries, Benefits, Healthcare, Strategy

I have to say that I’m very impressed with Washington these past couple of days. In just about 24 hours, the House and the Senate were able to reach an agreement on a massive economic stimulus plan, now tagged at more than $789 billion. That’s no small task. And now, it’s believed that a bill could reach the President’s desk within days.

The details of the bill still hadn’t been released late Wednesday, as there was expected to be some last-minute tweaks going on into the night. Still, that that didn’t stop bill-watchers from immediately speculating about what was saved and what was axed.

It’s easy to Monday morning quarterback for your own cause and question the details, the loopholes and, of course, the distribution of funds in this bill. The tech industry is no different. Already, there are those who are criticizing the plan’s investment in tech as being too complex or favoring big corporations over small businesses. But others note that the tech industry - no matter how the dollars and tax breaks are settled in the end - comes out a winner with this bill.

Consider this excerpt from the New York Times:

To many on K Street, the stimulus bill was the clearest guide to the new administration’s closest friends in the business world. What oil was to President Bush, some say, clean energy and technology are to the Obama White House. “We have a president who gets it,” said Dean Garfield, the president of the Information Technology Industry Council.

In the Senate version of the bill, about $7 billion was allocated for expanding broadband access into rural and underserved areas, $20 billion for a “smart grid power network” and $20 billion to digitize health records. It’s still not clear how the compromise between the House and the Senate will impact those allocations, though.

But let’s put those investments to the side for a minute. Those are the ones that are getting all of the attention. But there are plenty of other parts of this bill that will have a ripple effect on the tech industry - from manufacturing jobs to hardware sales to service contracts. Some of those line items, taken from the Senate’s version, include:

  • $20 billion, including $14 billion for K-12 and $6 billion for higher education, for renovation and modernization, including technology upgrades and energy efficiency improvements.
  • $1 billion for 21st century classrooms, including computer and science labs and teacher technology training.
  • $550 million to modernize aging hospitals and make healthcare technology upgrades at Indian Health Service Facilities.
  • $400 million to replace the 30-year-old Social Security Administration’s National Computer Center.
  • $245 million for “critical IT improvements” to the Farm Service Agency’s systems.
  • $276 million to upgrade and modernize information technology platforms for the State Department to meet post-9/11 security requirements.

Let’s not fool ourselves. This injection of funds will help get things kick-started but it won’t solve all of the problems. For an industry like tech, there’s a real opportunity to maximize the ROI by taking advantage of cutting-edge technologies that enterprise operations are looking into as a means of overall cost savings.

What will be the role of cloud computing in the 21st Century classroom? Will the SSA’s new National Computer Center take advantage of SaaS offerings? How many of the healthcare upgrades will take utilize portable WiFi-enabled devices? Is there a virtualization plan in place for those “critical IT improvements?”

It was the job of Congress and the administration to free those federal funds. From here on out, the job is all of ours. We need to make sure that the government has a firm understanding of the latest technological breakthroughs and knows how to take advantage of tech to operate more efficiently.

For the longest time,  Silicon Valley wanted some respect and attention in Washington. That day has finally come. Now, it’s time for the tech industry to step up to the plate and prove to this country that an investment in tech can go a long way.

Also see:

Obama: “It is unacceptable that the United States ranks 15th in the world in broadband adoption”
Group calls on Washington to establish national Broadband strategy

Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz is a senior editor at ZDNet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email Sam Diaz

Subscribe to Between the Lines via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 103 Talkback(s)
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan
the whole point of the US economic system is to restart
that feeling of "confidence" in the economy. The US "tubed
out" because of over borrowing to fund greedy speculative
schemes. So now... (Read the rest)
Posted by: vilppuu@... Posted on: 02/17/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
You would have to be .....  ShadeTree | 02/12/09
Pelosi on Weed  doranmichigan | 02/12/09
All spending is pork  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Sure does, but at what cost?  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Which is why you can't single out one piece of pork  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
You're joking, right?  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
The marketplace failed  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
And who runs most of the schools?  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Now you're really joking ...  tdnelson@... | 02/12/09
Marketplace isn't the one failing  pizzaman7 | 02/13/09
Speaking of dumb  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
Thats Funny...  tdnelson@... | 02/12/09
In case you didn't notice...  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
I'm already studying the results.  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Oh I'm sorry ...  tdnelson@... | 02/12/09
If you got a new boss  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Considering the "new" boss's inexperience...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
But the WHY is everything  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
Lets see the Results?  williamacole@... | 02/13/09
not over $714G in pork in this "stimulus" bill  Professor8 | 02/13/09
You say Pork keeps money flowing. So ...  tdnelson@... | 02/12/09
I agree  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Strange that after "both Clinton and Bush failed"...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Ah So ...  williamacole@... | 02/13/09
NONSENSE  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
IDEA! No, wait ...  williamacole@... | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  rhomp2002@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  doranmichigan | 02/12/09
The debt is already there  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Nice Try. Iraq didn't cause this.  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Regarding the national debt and who is responsible...  B.O.F.H. | 02/12/09
% of what?  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
GNP I would presume (nt)  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Econ majors should know what the National Debt goes against.  B.O.F.H. | 02/12/09
An econ major would know that...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Who is responsible?  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Constitution  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
National Debt and what IS responsible  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
That's half the story  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Things turned out well, only after a World War.  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Please do  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
Don't laugh. It's not a threat.  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Hang on there  soccm | 02/12/09
A social housing Pyramid scheme caused this.  TripleII | 02/12/09
Who's At Fault for Fannie & Freddie?  MsUnderestimated | 02/16/09
You got your numbers all out of skew.  Drandon | 02/12/09
Foolish Hyperbole is no argument  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
someone understands  stu.field@... | 02/14/09
*Flush*  branchman67 | 02/12/09
Borrowin madness  doranmichigan | 02/12/09
3 Ideas who's time has come..  bentedgz | 02/13/09
Yes, no, and yes  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  TStout81 | 02/12/09
This is just the beginning....  map3s | 02/12/09
Boy, you sure are easy to impress!  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  tommy@... | 02/12/09
You don't dissolve debt by borrowing more money.  Senrats | 02/12/09
Track the Stimulus (Decoder Ring Included!)  Senrats | 02/12/09
 JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  fred@... | 02/12/09
Think it will work out any better than...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Ethenol is certainly failing  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
I don't expect 100% success  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Let me guess...  Michael Kelly | 02/12/09
A lesson for you: The government does not "create" jobs.  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Weird logic  aandruli@... | 02/12/09
Talk about confused logic; Back to school for you!  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
Thank you!  Ben Step | 02/13/09
That the people responding to you  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
Hail the Chief ; people will still die in the cold and ignorance is quiet.  rtirman37@... | 02/12/09
Careers  JeffreyPaull | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  knoxbury | 02/12/09
Throwing money at education  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  Monosdeja | 02/12/09
Hope we don't offshore outsource all this!  jay.doraiswami@... | 02/12/09
Too late...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
BAD IDEA! Naive and short sighted  williamacole@... | 02/12/09
Big Brother...  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  ceebee@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  SandAndPalms | 02/12/09
I just don't see it  daileyml | 02/12/09
Nope, I doubt there will be.  TripleII | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  rMatey | 02/12/09
But the problem is that it's not "a short term, one shot deal".  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/12/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  Cardlady47 | 02/12/09
UNBELIEVABLE!  SherryCan | 02/13/09
What you been smokin?  rickroberts_mcse@... | 02/13/09
Compromise in Politics is not about common ground  Drandon | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  stu.field@... | 02/13/09
Let's not fool ourselves: Gvt mandated proprietary lock-in  scott1329 | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  LarryPTL | 02/13/09
Actually, much of this plan is designed to enslave the middle class  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/13/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  mellsworth@... | 02/13/09
The Most Encouraging Thing I've Seen  hiraghm@... | 02/13/09
It isn't just tech, the public isn't buying it.  TripleII | 02/13/09
thak you  stu.field@... | 02/14/09
Lobbyists 1st  JohnMcGrew@... | 02/16/09
Not one penny will go to  stan@... | 02/13/09
This enormous pile of pork will cost tech jobs.  stan@... | 02/13/09
What impact will the stimulus have on YOU?  daileyml | 02/14/09
No pain no gain  PClayden52@... | 02/14/09
FOR MORE DETAILS  ziondatamatics | 02/16/09
RE: Tech will see direct, indirect benefits from stimulus plan  vilppuu@... | 02/17/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads