Bibliographic Information

The ICT revolution : productivity differences and the digital divide

edited by Daniel Cohen, Pietro Garibaldi, Stefano Scarpetta ; with Bruno Amable ... [et al.]

(A report for the Fondazione Rodolfo Debenedetti)

Oxford University Press, 2004

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 20 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

"In association with the William Davidson Institute at the University of Michigan Business School" -- Added t.p

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The view that the Internet and the information and communication technology (ICT) revolution would deliver a frictionless economy without recessions is, at least for the time being, dead. This book takes stock of the ICT revolution, going well below the surface to ask and answer a few key questions: Did the ICT revolution contribute to the recent divergence in the growth record? And if this is the case, how and why were some countries better equipped to exploit the potential of ICT? The naive approach to the Internet views e-commerce as a means to achieve a perfect world of competition. By making information cheap and readily available, it should allow the affluent consumer to raise competitive pressure on firms, help the firms themselves to put competitive pressure on their own suppliers, and so on. For the poor countries, the story goes, the Internet should lower the barriers to entry to rich countries' markets, and foster their inclusion in world markets. However, the theory of economic geography does not support the idea that geography becomes irrelevant as the cost of distance is reduced. Instead, when investigating the impact of the first communication revolution in the nineteenth century, we observe quite the opposite trend. Rather than fostering the forces of "dispersion" across the location of economic activity, railways, the telegraph, and the telephone have produced instead an extraordinary concentration of economic activities: the forces of "concentration" have been much more powerful than the forces of dispersion. Understanding the new forces of agglomeration and the forces of dispersion in the new Internet economy is one of the major themes of this book. Drawing on a wide range of data, it assembles the work of two teams of leading economists in the ICT field. Part 1, the work of the first team, focuses on the role that the ICT revolution played in advanced countries to grow output and productivity at macro, industry, and firm levels. Part 2, the work of the second team, assesses whether or not the digital economy will indeed result in a more competitive and more equal world.

Table of Contents

  • PART I: THE SPREAD OF ICT AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH: IS EUROPE REALLY LAGGING BEHIND IN THE NEW ECONOMY?
  • Introduction and Overview
  • 1. What is the Role of ICT in Shaping Recent Growth Patterns in the United States and Other OECD Countries? - Some Aggregate Evidence
  • 2. Scraping the Surface: what Lies behind Aggregate Growth Patterns? Industry- and Firm-Level Evidence
  • 3. Productivity, Investment in ICT, Human Capital and Changes in the Organisation of Work: Micro Evidence from Germany and the U.S
  • 4. ICT and Growth: the Role of Factor and Product Markets
  • 5. Do Policy and Regulatory Settings Help to Explain Industry Differences in Productivity and Innovation Activities across OECD Countries?
  • Appendix
  • Comments
  • PART II: INTERNET: THE ELUSIVE QUEST FOR A FRICTIONLESS ECONOMY
  • Introduction and Overview
  • 6. Markets and Consumers
  • 7. Firms And Suppliers (B... 2b Or Not 2b?)
  • 8. Supply Chains, Market Access and the Internet: A View from the South
  • Appendices
  • Comments
  • CONCLUSION

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top