| List of Figures |
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x | |
| List of Tables |
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xii | |
| List of Maps |
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xiv | |
| List of Boxes |
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xv | |
| List of Abbreviations |
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xvi | |
| Contributors |
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xvii | |
| Introduction |
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xix | |
| Part I. The Spread of ICT and Productivity Growth: Is Europe Really Lagging Behind in the New Economy? (Edited by Stefano Scarpetta) |
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1 | (140) |
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Eric Bartelsman, Andrea Bassanini, John Haltiwanger, Ronald S. Jarmin, and Thorsten Schank |
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Introduction and Overview |
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3 | (8) |
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1. The Role of ICT in Shaping Growth Patterns in the United States and Other OECD Countries?-Some Aggregate Evidence |
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11 | (19) |
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1.1. Some stylized facts about GDP growth and its main drivers |
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11 | (7) |
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18 | (10) |
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28 | (2) |
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2. Scraping the Surface: What Lies Behind Aggregate Growth Patterns? Industry- and Firm-level Evidence |
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30 | (20) |
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2.1. The composition of aggregate productivity growth: the ICT sector and beyond |
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30 | (5) |
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2.2. Firm dynamics and productivity growth: evidence from firm-level data |
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35 | (13) |
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48 | (2) |
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3. Productivity, Investment in ICT, Human Capital, and Changes in the Organization of Work: Micro Evidence from Germany and the United States |
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50 | (19) |
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50 | (4) |
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54 | (4) |
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3.3. The relationship between productivity, wages, and advanced technology |
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58 | (4) |
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3.4. Experimentation? Differences across Germany and the United States |
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62 | (5) |
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3.5. Summary and interpretation |
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67 | (2) |
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4. ICT and Growth: The Role of Factor and Product Markets |
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69 | (14) |
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69 | (1) |
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4.2. ICT as an investment good |
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70 | (1) |
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4.3. ICT adoption as an innovative activity |
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71 | (3) |
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74 | (3) |
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4.5. Market institutions: the role of product and factor markets |
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77 | (4) |
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81 | (2) |
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5. Do Policy and Regulatory Settings Help to Explain Industry Differences in Productivity and Innovation Activities Across OECD Countries? |
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83 | (30) |
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83 | (1) |
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5.2. Existing empirical evidence |
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84 | (10) |
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5.3. The empirical evidence on the links between policy, institutions, and performance |
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94 | (17) |
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111 | (2) |
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113 | (12) |
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125 | (8) |
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125 | (4) |
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129 | (4) |
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133 | (8) |
| Part II. Internet: The Elusive Quest of a Frictionless Economy (Edited by Daniel Cohen) |
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141 | (106) |
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Bruno Amable, Philippe Askenazy, Andrea Goldstein, and David O'Connor |
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Introduction and Overview |
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143 | (6) |
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149 | (14) |
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6.1. Internet makes life more complex |
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150 | (3) |
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6.2. Case studies: the lasting role of F2F |
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153 | (7) |
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6.3. Real estate in Paris |
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160 | (1) |
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161 | (2) |
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7. Firms and Suppliers (B...2B or not 2B?) |
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163 | (18) |
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7.1. The key role of quality certification |
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164 | (10) |
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7.2. E-integration and spatial location |
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174 | (7) |
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8. Supply Chains, Market Access, and the Internet: A View from the South |
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181 | (45) |
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8.1. Software development |
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183 | (11) |
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194 | (8) |
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8.3. Ornamental horticulture |
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202 | (5) |
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207 | (8) |
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215 | (5) |
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8.6. Main findings and policy implications |
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220 | (6) |
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226 | (6) |
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226 | (1) |
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227 | (3) |
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230 | (2) |
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232 | (8) |
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232 | (5) |
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237 | (3) |
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240 | (7) |
| Final Remarks |
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247 | (12) |
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247 | (3) |
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250 | (9) |
| Index |
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259 | |