How is Ukraine’s software industry weathering the war?

  • 📰 TheEconomist
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 91 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 40%
  • Publisher: 92%

Malaysia News News

Malaysia Malaysia Latest News,Malaysia Malaysia Headlines

Battered by the war, Ukraine’s economy will shrink by nearly a third in 2022, according to the country’s central bank. But one sector has fared much better than most

will shrink by nearly a third in 2022, according to the country’s central bank. But one sector has fared much better than most. The Ukrainian IT Association, a tech-industry body based in Kyiv, the capital, reckons that in the first six months of this year software exports grew by 23% compared with the same period in 2021. Only 2% of Ukraine’s 5,000 software companies have folded this year.

Part of the reason why the industry has weathered the war relatively well is clever planning. Before Russia’s invasion GlobalLogic, an American firm with about 8,000 coders in Ukraine, made plans to relocate employees to safer areas of the country and carried out week-long trials working from Lviv, a city in the west. Vitaly Sedler, chief executive of Intellias, a Ukrainian software firm, had a similar strategy.

But ill winds are gaining strength. In recent weeks methodical Russian strikes on critical infrastructure have caused widespread outages of water and electricity. On November 17th 10m Ukrainians were without power, according to Volodymyr Zelensky, the president. For Ukraine’s IT sector this could be “devastating”, warns Andrei Drobot, a professor at the Kyiv School of Economics, speaking from a powerless flat. Conscription is a smaller problem.

This year’s growth may have been helped by what Ihor Kostiv, an executive in Lviv for GlobalLogic, calls “emotional support” from sympathetic Western clients. Such altruism is unlikely to withstand more extensive blackouts. Already IT exports, the bulk of which is software, have slowed. The growth between July and September this year was 13%, according to Konstantin Vasyuk of the Ukrainian IT Association, well below the rate in the first half of the year.

In the longer term the “huge risk”, says Mr Bornyakov, is that more of Ukraine’s IT companies will relocate to Poland or elsewhere in Europe. Of roughly 285,000 tech specialists in Ukraine at the beginning of this year, more than 50,000—mostly women—have moved abroad, suggests a survey by the Lviv IT Cluster, an industry association. To stop that brain drain, Ukraine will need to keep its infrastructure working. And ultimately it will need the fighting to stop.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 6. in MY
 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.

UPS running out?

gud gud

watch busy

I dislike everything the Economist likes

is the light still on?

Soft heart for Ukraine.

因为大家都要上网啊,小傻瓜

Gl to makers of software in ukraine. Only industry that doesnt require functioning markets as business needs saas, marketing needs localized software etc even when running on deficit of income. Less money being offered, but at least jobs are still there.

Keep lavishly feeding your military industry by continuing to send large quantities of weapons to Ukraine, and Ukraine's economy could end up shrinking by over 90%, after Russia gets done completely destroying Ukraine's energy infrastructure.

interesting...

They definitely top the website hack attacks

Malaysia Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Malaysia Headlines