Study of the impact of Free/Libre or Open Source Software (FLOSS) on the European ICT sector
Submitted by Ferran on Sun, 2007-02-04 11:04. :: News and Events
The European Commission has released a study about the economic impact of Free/Libre or Open Source Software (FLOSS) on the European ICT sector.
It was prepared by a consortium of research institutions led by UNU-MERIT's Rishab Aiyer Ghosh.
Looking at the impact of FLOSS on European competitiveness in ICTs, the study finds that such software is of great importance to the digital industry in Europe and several other parts of the world.
It has already reached considerable market share in several fields, including web servers and operating systems. A large share of public and private sector organisations use at least some FLOSS.
Read the full press release at http://www.merit.unu.edu/


Just to add, the full report is available at this link: http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/ict/policy/doc/2006-11-20-flossimpact.pdf
It is a 287 pages report, for those who are bandwith limited, I have copied and pasted the executive summary here.
Executive summary: Key findings
The information economy is a large market. Including the provision of infrastructure and services for the creation, exchange and processing of information and communication services as well as the sales of information itself, this market is now in the range of 10% of GDP in most developed countries, and accounts for more than half of their economic growth. Software is one of the key elements driving ICTs' role in the economy, and the structure, competitiveness, performance of the ICT industry has potential to be strongly affected by Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS1). Financed by the European Commission's Directorate General for Enterprise and Industry, a study has been carried out by a team led by UNU-MERIT, the Netherlands, to identify the role of FLOSS in the economy, its direct impact on the ICT sector, its indirect impact on ICT-related sectors and to recommend policies based on forecasted scenarios. This three-page executive summary highlights the key findings and recommendations, according to these four categories.
FLOSS role in the economy: market share and geography
- While the U.S. has the edge in terms of large FLOSS-related businesses, the greater individual contribution from Europe has led to an increasing number of globally successful European FLOSS small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
Direct economic impact of FLOSSIndirect economic impact: FLOSS, innovation and growth
- Increased FLOSS use may provide a way for Europe to compensate for a low GDP share of ICT investment relative to the US. A growth and innovation simulation model shows that increasing the FLOSS share of software investment from 20% to 40% would lead to a 0.1% increase in annual EU GDP growth excluding benefits within the ICT industry itself - i.e. over Euro 10 billion annually.
Trends, scenarios and policy strategies- Europe faces three scenarios: CLOSED, where existing business models are entrenched through legal and technical regulation, favouring a passive consumer model over new businesses supporting active participation in an information society of "prosumers"; GENERIC, where current mixed policies lead to a gradual growth of FLOSS while many of the opportunities it presents are missed; VOLUNTARY, where policies and the market develop to recognise and utilise the potential of FLOSS and similar collaborative models of creativity to harness the full power of active citizens in the information society.
Economic impact of FLOSS on innovation and competitiveness of the EU ICT sector© 2006 MERIT. Prepared on November 20, 2006 12