Fakes cost IT industry $100bn per year

One in 10 tech products is counterfeit...

By Dan Ilett, 16 August 2005 16:05

NEWS The IT industry is losing up to $100bn per year from counterfeit products, audit firm KPMG estimates.

Based on the firm's interviews with electronics industry executives, as many as one in 10 IT products sold is counterfeit.

Richard Girgenti, a partner in the KPMG ForensicSM practice, said in a statement: "Counterfeiting is one of the most significant threats to the free market. It not only steals the value of intellectual capital, it stifles innovation and robs customers of the quality they expect from a brand."

The International Chamber of Commerce has estimated that counterfeit goods account for six per cent of world trade in 2003, valued at $456bn.

According to FT reports, China is the biggest producer of counterfeit products - which include switches, memory and hard drives.

The audit firm said counterfeit IT products are sold on the internet instead of street corners, so most end users are unaware they are buying fakes.

Illegal replicas of brand name technology products are damaging revenues and counterfeiting, though a relatively recent problem, is turning out to be one of the most challenging issues for the IT industry, the company said.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Dick Winchester

    Hang about! Isn't a Chinese company that beat Marconi to the BT contract and is odds on favourite to buy them.. Marconi that is not BT!

    Seems to me there's some bargaining to be done here..... i.e. clean up your act otherwise you don't get legit access to our markets..

  2. 2. anonymous

    I work for a company that is suffering from this. Like many others, we have outsourced production to China to save costs. We established that counterfeit products were being produced at night, on the same production lines that were used to produce legit products during the day, however, using cheaper components.

    We get the support calls from angry customers who have bought in good faith.

    Despite providing technical, photographic and other evidence over a year ago now, so far the Chinese authorities have taken no action at all against the company concerned, who continue to advertise their services.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ