20 research outputs found

    The global information technology report 2014

    Get PDF
    Executive summary When The Global Information Technology Report (GITR) and the Networked Readiness Index (NRI) were created more than 13 years ago, the attention of decision makers was focused on how to develop strategies that would allow them to benefit from what Time Magazine had described as “the new economy”: a new way of organizing and managing economic activity based on the new opportunities that the Internet provided for businesses. At present, the world is slowly emerging from one of the worst financial and economic crises in decades, and policymakers, business leaders, and civil society are looking into new opportunities that can consolidate growth, generate new employment, and create business opportunities. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) continue to rank high on the list as one of the key sources of new opportunities to foster innovation and boost economic and social prosperity, for both advanced and emerging economies. For more than 13 years, the NRI has provided decision makers with a useful conceptual framework to evaluate the impact of ICTs at a global level and to benchmark the ICT readiness and usage of their economies

    The global Information technology report 2015: ICTs for inclusive growth

    Get PDF
    Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are transforming our economies and societies. Since 2001, The Global Information and Technology Report series and the Networked Readiness Index (NRI) have been taking the pulse of the ICT revolution worldwide. The NRI identifies the capacity of countries to leveraging ICT, by assessing the overall political and business environment, the level of ICT readiness and usage of ICT among the population, businesses and government, as well as the overall impacts of ICTs on the economy and society at large. The 2015 results, which covers 143 economies, confirms the dominance of advanced economies and the persistence of the multiple-faceted digital divides not only across but also within economies. They reveal the pervasive digital poverty that deprives the neediest from the opportunities offered by ICTs. Beyond this diagnosis, under the theme “ICTs for Inclusive Growth”, the 2015 edition of the report provides solutions from leading experts and practitioners to alleviate digital poverty and make the ICT revolution a global reality.&nbsp

    Services intermédiaires et développement

    No full text
    Lanvin Bruno. Services intermĂ©diaires et dĂ©veloppement. In: Revue d’économie industrielle, vol. 43, 1er trimestre 1988. Le dynamisme des services aux entreprises. pp. 218-228

    Services et nouvelles stratégies industrielles: quels enjeux pour le Sud ?

    No full text
    Lanvin Bruno. Services et nouvelles stratégies industrielles: quels enjeux pour le Sud ?. In: Tiers-Monde, tome 29, n°115, 1988. Industrialisation et développement. ModÚles, expériences, perspectives, sous la direction de Abdelkader Sid Ahmed et Alain Valette. pp. 949-960

    Les services, clé du développement économique ?

    No full text
    Lanvin Bruno, Prieto Francisco. Les services, clé du développement économique ?. In: Tiers-Monde, tome 27, n°105, 1986. pp. 97-108

    Décentralisation française contre nouveau fédéralisme américain

    No full text
    Guibert, Lanvin Bruno. Décentralisation française contre nouveau fédéralisme américain. In: Politiques et management public, vol. 1, n° 1, 1983. pp. 201-208

    The global information technology report 2013

    Get PDF
    Executive summary When The Global Information Technology Report (GITR) and the Networked Readiness Index (NRI) were created some 12 years ago, the attention of decision makers and investors was on adopting business and financial strategies that would allow them to develop in the context of a fast-moving but nascent Internet economy. Over more than a decade, the NRI has provided decision leaders with a useful conceptual framework to evaluate the impact of information and communications technologies (ICTs) at a global level, and to benchmark the ICT readiness and the usage of their economies. Today, the world has undergone massive changes: the Internet bubble has come and gone, and emerging countries such as China and India have become prominent global users and providers of ICT equipment and services. Struggling to emerge from the financial crisis, developed economies are striving to return to higher levels of growth and competitiveness while fighting stubbornly high unemployment rates, especially among their youth. Both emerging and developed economies are focusing on innovation, competing globally for talent, resources, and market shares. Information flows and networks have spread across borders in ways that could not be imagined before the onset of the Internet, the global adoption of mobile telephony and social networks, and the rapid growth of broadband. Business models have been redefined, the workplace has been redesigned, small startups have evolved into large companies, and entire functions of society (education, health, security, privacy) are being rethought

    The global innovation index 2013 : the local dynamics of innovation

    No full text
    "We are pleased to present the Global Innovation Index (GII) 2013. The GII 2013, in its 6th edition this year, is co-published by Cornell University, INSEAD, and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO, a specialized agency of the United Nations). Booz & Company, the Confederation of Indian Industry, du, and Huawei support the elaboration of the GII as Knowledge Partners in 2013..."Cornell Universit
    corecore