Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
557354 | Telecommunications Policy | 2012 | 11 Pages |
This paper uses a new set of country data for 14 countries, members of the OECD, and a non-parametric approach to provide new evidence on the impact of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) on labour productivity growth between 1995 and 2005. For the first time, in the present paper a bootstrap approach for the decomposition of labour productivity change, proposed by Kumar and Russell (2002), is employed. This approach permits to conduct statistical inference on the parameters of interest, and to analyse the effects of ICT technologies on capital accumulation. The results confirm the role of ICT as a general purpose technology that needs organisational and business process changes to fully exploit its growth opportunities. The paper also finds out, by applying a non-parametric test, that ICT technologies positively contribute to the generation of convergence clubs in the evolution of labour productivity. Finally, the empirical evidence offers some basic guidance for future policy intervention in supporting ICT capital investments.
► We analyse14 OECD countries by a bootstrapped DEA procedure. ► We provide new evidence on the impact of ICT on labour productivity growth. ► The results confirm the role of ICT as a general purpose technology. ► ICT positively contribute to the generation of convergence clubs.