PC Software Industry Lost $8.08 Billion To Pirates In 1994

Piracy Rate In The US Declines

February 24, 1995 (Washington, DC) -- The Software Publishers Association
(SPA) is releasing its latest global statistics on software piracy today
to coincide with Vice President Gore's remarks before the G-7 "Information
Society" Conference. The three-day meeting, which begins today in
Brussels, will broadly address issues surrounding the development of the
Global Information Infrastructure (GII). The SPA report details high
double-digit piracy rates in countries from all regions of the world. The
report serves to underscore the threat large scale intellectual property
theft poses to the development of the GII. Intellectual property rights
are becoming increasingly critical in international trade negotiations as
well, as evidenced in the recent stance taken by the USTR on intellectual
property violations in China.

The SPA statistics released today summarize 1994 global software piracy
activity. In 1994, the personal computer software industry lost $8.08
billion due to illegal copying of business application software alone. The
SPA estimates that just under half (49%) of the business software in use
in 1994 was pirated. The estimates do not include illegal copying of
operating systems, education, entertainment, or personal productivity
software.

"The good news is that we see a decline of $1.9 billion in revenue losses
from theft of business software from 1993," said Ken Wasch, Executive
Director of the SPA. "The bad news is that drop is due entirely to
declining prices of business software in country after country. Therefore,
as sales volumes have increased and prices have declined, the volume of
pirated units have nearly commensurably risen. Overall, the number of
units pirated actually increased 14% in 1994. These figures clearly show
that while some countries have shown improvement there is still a major
problem in international markets. "

China, Russia and Thailand Rates Exceed 90%

Of the countries for which the SPA is able to estimate piracy losses, China
has the highest piracy rate at 98%. Russia at 95% and Thailand at 92% are
close behind. All three countries' poor records of protecting software
copyrights led the SPA to cite them in its 1994 Section 301 filing with
the US Trade Representative. Software industry losses to piracy in these
three countries in 1994 were $187 million in China, $144 million in Russia
and $55 million in Thailand.

"China, Russia, and Thailand deserve credit for enacting copyright laws
that specifically protect computer programs and other software," said
Wasch. "But the astronomic levels of software piracy in these countries
illustrate what the SPA has learned in the US and abroad -- that the law
is just the first step toward legal software use. Another crucial step is
education -- teaching software users why they should not make illegal
copies. We invite the governments and software users in China, Russia, and
Thailand to work with us in sending that message."

Japan and US Have Highest Piracy Revenue Losses in the World

Piracy losses to software publishers in Japan were $1.31 billion in 1994,
higher than those seen in any country of the world. While the loss in
Japan was down from $1.66 billion in 1993, this decline was largely due to
price declines. The number of units of software pirated fell only 60% in
Japan between 1993 and 1994.

Piracy losses in the US fell from $2.08 billion in 1993 to $1.05 billion in
1994 - a nearly 50% decline. In spite of having one of the lowest piracy
rates in the world, losses in the US are among the highest, however,
because of the sheer size of the US personal computer hardware and
software markets.

Western Europe Follows Trend

Piracy losses in Western Europe declined sharply in 1994, falling to $1.65
billion from $3.65 billion in 1993. Once again, however, much of the drop
was due to the decline in software prices from 1993 to 1994. The rate of
software piracy remained at a fairly high 45% in Western Europe in 1994.
Piracy losses in France amounted to $482 million in 1994, and were the
highest of all countries in Western Europe. While most other Western
European countries saw 10-20%+ declines in their piracy rates between 1993
and 1994, France's decline from 66% to 62% can only be called
disappointing.

Results in other countries varied widely. Some countries, notably
Switzerland and Finland, had among the lowest piracy rates in the world in
1994, while others, such as Spain and Portugal, had piracy rates above
70%. Of all the countries in Western Europe, the results in Italy in 1994
were the most distressing. Strong anti-piracy actions by the Italian
government in early 1993 led to a much reduced piracy rate for all of
1993, and created great expectations for 1994. Unfortunately, these
actions did not carry through into 1994. As a result, piracy in Italy was
up in 1994, with the rate increasing from 66% to 68%. Although dollar
losses in Italy fell from $283 million in 1993 to $264 million in 1994,
the decline again was entirely due to price declines. The number of
applications pirated in Italy rose 4% between 1993 and 1994.

Asian/Pacific Rim Markets Remain Piracy Problems

Of the eleven Asia/Pacific Rim markets for which SPA is able to develop
piracy estimates, only two (Australia and New Zealand) had piracy rates
below 50% in 1994. The software industry lost $2.03 billion to pirates in
this region in 1994, as the overall piracy rate was 62%. While this was a
25% decline from the $2.72 billion loss (75% rate) of 1993, the decline
was again due to the fall of application prices. The number of
applications pirated increased by 1%.

Even in a region with many problem markets, China still stands out.
Ninety-eight percent of the business applications software in use in China
in 1994 was pirated. "The Chinese government's unwillingness to take
necessary actions to protect intellectual property has prompted the US
government to cite China under Section 301 trade sanctions," said Mark
Traphagen, Counsel for the SPA. "We fully support the administration's
firm stance against China and hope that it will force the authorities in
China to take steps to remedy their well-documented piracy and counterfeit
problem."

SPA Adds Home-Use Business Software to Analysis

SPA estimates are based on hardware sales figures from International Data
Corporation, and on SPA and other industry software sales data. "The SPA
estimates now consider business applications used on home-based personal
computers," said SPA Research Director David Tremblay. "In previous years,
our piracy analysis did not consider the purchase and use of software on
home computers. We could no longer ignore this use. In many markets, home
computers accounted for 30 to 40% of personal computer sales. The addition
of these PCs into the analysis is why our 1993 piracy estimates were
recently revised upward from $7.45 billion to the current $9.96 billion
estimate."

The Software Publishers Association is the principal trade association of
the PC software industry. Its 1,150 members represent the leading
publishers in the business, consumer, and education markets. The SPA has
offices in Washington, DC, and Paris, France. SPA press releases are
available on-line through CompuServe (GO:SPAFORUM), and from SPA's faxback
service at 800 637-6823.

Software Publishers Association
1730 M St, Northwest, Suite 700, Washington, D.C. 20036
202-452-1600,  Fax: 202-223-8756

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