Original Defence and security market research and the defence & security sector trend analysis for the Spanish Defence and Security industry.
Competitive intelligence, Spanish defence & security company rankings and SWOT analyses on international and domestic defence & security companies in Spain.
The Spain Defence & Security Report has been researched at source in 2007, and features latest-available data covering all headline indicators; 5-year industry forecasts for Spain through end-2012; company rankings and competitive landscapes covering national and multinational arms and components manufacturers, electronic and software producers, and companies providing defence solutions, as well as analysis of latest industry developments, trends and regulatory changes in Spain.
Spanish Defence & Security Report provides professionals, consultancies, government departments, regulatory bodies and researchers with independent forecasts and regional competitive intelligence on the Spanish defence & security industry.
Key Benefits of Report
Benchmark It’s Independent 5-Year Defence & Security Industry Forecast on Spain to test other views - a key input for successful budgetary and strategic business planning in the Spanish defence and security market.
Target Business Opportunities & Risks in the Spanish Defence & Security Sector through reviews of latest industry trends, regulatory changes, and major deals, projects and investments in Spain
Exploit The Latest Competitive Spanish Defence & Security Intelligence & Company SWOTS on your peers and competitors through company rankings by sales, market share, investments and leading products and services.
Coverage
SWOT Analysis
Snapshot evaluation of the major issues affecting security, the defence sector, economy and politics, with issues subdivided into ‘strengths’
Political Risk Assessment
Drawing on It’s twenty-year heritage of Country Risk analysis, this comprehensively evaluates the key risks to domestic politics and
foreign relations, focusing on issues most likely to affect either domestic security or the defence sector.
Security Risk Analysis
It’s proprietary Security Ratings provide a reliable – and country comparable – guide to conflict, terrorism and criminal risk, backed up by our analyst’s latest assessment of each component. Furthermore, drawing on our Country Risk expertise, we assess the state’s vulnerability to a serious – or prolonged – terrorist campaign.
Defence Industry Assessment
Overview of industry landscape and key players; public/private structure, size and value of industry sector; assessment of business operating environment and latest regulatory developments;
It 5-Year Forecasts
Historic data series and 5-year forecasts to end-2011 for key industry indicators, supported by explicit assumptions, plus analysis of key downside risks to the main forecast. Defence expenditure (local currency and US$bn); defence expenditure (% of total budget); defence expenditure (% of GDP); defence expenditure per capita, US$; defence budget (local currency and US$bn); employment in arms production (‘000s); employment in arms production (% of labour force); arms imports (US$mn); arms imports (% of total imports); arms exports (US$mn); arms exports (% of total exports)
It 5-year forecast and analysis of all headline macroeconomic indicators, including real GDP growth, inflation, fiscal balance, trade balance, current account and external debt.
Company Profiles
Company profiles, including senior executives and full contact details, business activity, products and services, foreign direct investments and projects.
Executive Summary
It's newly released Q207 defence and security report predicts a solid outlook for the Spanish defence industry and a stable internal and security outlook. The Basque separatist organisation ETA has now ended its ceasefire, a significant setback for the peace process, but it has been seriously weakened and presents somewhat less of a security risk than it has in recent years. Opinion polls still place José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) ahead of its rival conservative opposition party, the Partido Popular. With the incorporation of a new generation of younger voters, the government may gain support for a modernising agenda across a wide range of social and political issues. There is also an opportunity for Spain to gain a stronger voice within Europe, based on a good relationship with many of the accession countries.
Relations between the central government in Madrid and the country's 17 autonomous regions can sometimes be difficult, sparking disputes over a wide range of issues. Spanish security forces continue to focus their attention toward international threats. There are currently no major conventional military threats to the country, but the threat from international and domestic terrorism remains very real. Spain's wake-up call came in March 2004, when al-Qaeda detonated a series of bombs on Madrid's rail network. The bombings had a profound effect on both Spain's domestic and foreign policy, in terms of Spanish counter-terrorist operations and the withdrawal of Spanish troops from Iraq.
The ongoing modernisation process at the heart of the armed forces, combined with an increase in Spain's involvement in peacekeeping operations, has justified an overall increase in the defence budget. Also, in the light of the Madrid bombings and the pressing need to boost counter-terrorism operations, the new administration has opted for a 17.1% increase in the Security Services' budget. Total expenditure is forecast to increase steadily from EUR9.03bn in 2005 to reach EUR10.15bn by 2010. The defence industry will benefit from planned increases in government expenditure. Restructuring and consolidation in the Spanish and European defence industry, and the state's continued relinquishment of its hold on the industry, has allowed Spanish firms to increasingly integrate into pan-European and transatlantic markets, and gain greater access to international markets. As a result, arms exports are expected to rise in the near future, and imports are also likely to benefit from the government's modernisation plans.
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