59 research outputs found

    The Relationship between ICT Investment and Productivity in the Canadian Economy: A Review of the Evidence

    Get PDF
    The objective of this report is to shed light on the relationship between information and communications technologies (ICT) and productivity in the Canadian economy.The key conclusion of the report is that ICT has been the driving force behind the acceleration of productivity growth in Canada and the United States since 1996. However, the potential of ICT has not been fully exploited and we will continue to see significant ICT contributions to productivity growth in coming years. The role for government is to develop appropriate policy frameworks so that the productivity-enhancing effects of ICT can be fully realized.Productivity, ICT, Productivity drivers, Policy frameworks, ICT investment, ICT capital.

    Innovation and the economic performance of the primary information sector: a multidisciplinary approach

    Get PDF
    The aim of this research is to understand and compare the implications of recent technical changes for the development and performance of three key component sub-sectors of the primary information sector (PIS): the Information and Communication Technology supply industries; Telecommunications services and Media services. In this study, the author first reviews the most important economic theories explaining the links between technical change or progress and economic performance (i.e. Neoclassical and Neo- Schumpeterian / Evolutionary), as well as the relatively recent “New Economy” writings about the latest wave of technological innovations. Secondly, the author adopts an historical and evolutionary approach to examine the evolution of three main groups of activities representing the PIS industries in the case of the USA. The study provides an account of the main technical innovations but also the regulatory, organisational, managerial and stylistic changes that follow and complete these innovations. These changes contribute to the creation of new industries and markets and, in a fundamental way to the harvesting of their benefits. Three key groups of activities are taken as case studies for empirical and historical analyses: first, the computer industry, second, the wireline telecommunication industry, and third, the audiovisual content and distribution media services. In the case of the computer and media content industries, while providing an account of the links between innovations and economic performance, the study also examines the evolution from manufacturing-type activities into activities better described as services. In the case of the wireline telecommunication industries, the author highlights the separation of different activities into different modules and highlights the role of the regulator as current “system integrator”. The perspective adopted in this research is critical of those approaches that rely on mainstream economics to provide the main framework for explaining the effect of technical change on the economic performance of these sectors. This study, rather, emphasises the necessity of using a variety of theories to explain the evolution of these sectors. In addition to an historical and evolutionary approach, this study proposes a re-defined version of Baumol’s theory of cost disease (based on a notion of “creative inputs”). It also draws on relevant aspects of the service economics literature and modularity theories (defined as a subset of theories within the Complex Evolving Systems’ school of thought)

    Nudging lifestyles for better health outcomes: crowdsourced data and persuasive technologies for behavioural change

    Get PDF
    For at least three decades, a Tsunami of preventable poor health has continued to threaten the future prosperity of our nations. Despite its effective destructive power, our collective predictive and preventive capacity remains remarkably under-developed This Tsunami is almost entirely mediated through the passive and unintended consequences of modernisation. The malignant spread of obesity in genetically stable populations dictates that gene disposition is not a significant contributor as populations, crowds or cohorts are all incapable of experiencing a new shipment of genes in only 2-3 decades. The authors elaborate on why a supply-side approach: advancing health care delivery cannot be expected to impact health outcomes effectively. Better care sets the stage for more care yet remains largely impotent in returning individuals to disease-free states. The authors urge an expedited paradigmatic shift in policy selection criterion towards using data intensive crowd-based evidence integrating insights from system thinking, networks and nudging. Collectively these will support emerging potentialities of ICT used in proactive policy modelling. Against this background the authors proposes a solution that stated in a most compact form consists of: the provision of mundane yet high yield data through light instrumentation of crowds enabling participative sensing, real time living epidemiology separating the per unit co-occurrences which are health promoting from those which are not, nudging through persuasive technologies, serious gaming to sustain individual health behaviour change and intuitive visualisation with reliable simulation to evaluate and direct public health investments and policies in evidence-based waysJRC.DDG.J.4-Information Societ

    Global Trends to 2035 - Economy and Society. November 2018

    Get PDF
    This study maps and analyses current and future global trends in the fields of economics and society, covering the period to 2035. Drawing on and complementing existing literature, it summarises and analyses the findings of relevant foresight studies in relation to such global trends. It traces recent changes in the perceived trajectory of already-identified trends and identifies significant new or emerging trends. It also addresses potential policy implications of such trends for the European Union

    Innovation and transformation in the Swedish manufacturing sector, 1970-2007

    Get PDF
    This doctoral thesis investigates changes in the volume and character of Swedish manufacturing sector innovation output between 1970 and 2007, a time span composed of both extended periods of relative prosperity and decline. More specifically, it examines whether changes in the number of innovations, the character of the innovating firms, and the distribution of innovations across industries are generally associated with any such period. Significant differences in received accounts of structural transformation in the Swedish manufacturing sector motivate the study. A newly compiled database containing observations of nearly 4000 innovations is explored. It is found that innovation output is at its greatest during the economically stagnant period running from 1975 and until the first years of the 19 80s. Furthermore, innovations produced in this period are more novel than those of any other period. Innovation output observed in the relatively prosperous period 1994-2007 is meager and generally less novel. There is a marked increase in small firm innovation; from the early 1980s onwards, small firms are the most important source of innovation. The increase cuts through the entire period and stands in contrast with the economically important role traditionally considered to be played by large firms in the Swedish economy. Innovation output is found to shift from being primarily achieved in the capital goods sector to being subsequently developed in fields such as instruments, telecom products, and software. With regard to the revolutionary growth of microelectronics characterizing the period, the Swedish manufacturing sector is found to be competent in implementing such technology and to be primarily a receiver rather than a supplier of microelectronic components

    ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks: a literature review

    Get PDF
    Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementation is a complex and vibrant process, one that involves a combination of technological and organizational interactions. Often an ERP implementation project is the single largest IT project that an organization has ever launched and requires a mutual fit of system and organization. Also the concept of an ERP implementation supporting business processes across many different departments is not a generic, rigid and uniform concept and depends on variety of factors. As a result, the issues addressing the ERP implementation process have been one of the major concerns in industry. Therefore ERP implementation receives attention from practitioners and scholars and both, business as well as academic literature is abundant and not always very conclusive or coherent. However, research on ERP systems so far has been mainly focused on diffusion, use and impact issues. Less attention has been given to the methods used during the configuration and the implementation of ERP systems, even though they are commonly used in practice, they still remain largely unexplored and undocumented in Information Systems research. So, the academic relevance of this research is the contribution to the existing body of scientific knowledge. An annotated brief literature review is done in order to evaluate the current state of the existing academic literature. The purpose is to present a systematic overview of relevant ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks as a desire for achieving a better taxonomy of ERP implementation methodologies. This paper is useful to researchers who are interested in ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks. Results will serve as an input for a classification of the existing ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks. Also, this paper aims also at the professional ERP community involved in the process of ERP implementation by promoting a better understanding of ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks, its variety and history

    Nudging lifestyles for better health outcomes : crowsourced data and persuasive technologies for behavioural change

    Get PDF
    Analysis of lifesyle induced by cultural modernisation that are producing negative outcomes (obesity, diabetes, etc) and discussion of how social media could be harnessed together with insights from behavioural sciences to induce behavioural change

    Digital Skills, Labour Market, and Productivity

    Get PDF
    Analysis of the impact of possessing digital skills on labour market outcomes
    corecore