Author List: Dedrick, Jason; Kraemer, Kenneth L.; Shih, Eric;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2013, Volume 30, Issue 1, Page 97-122.
Previous research has found that information technology (IT) investment is associated with significant productivity gains for developed countries but not for developing countries. Yet developing countries have continued to increase their investment in IT rapidly. Given this apparent disconnect, there is a need for new research to study whether the investment has begun to pay off in greater productivity for developing countries. We analyze new data on IT investment and productivity for 45 countries from 1994 to 2007, and compare the results with earlier research. We find that upper-income developing countries have achieved positive and significant productivity gains from IT investment in the more recent period as they have increased their IT capital stocks and gained experience with the use of IT. We also find that the productivity effects of IT are moderated by country factors, including human resources, openness to foreign investment, and the quality and cost of the telecommunications infrastructure. The academic implication is that the effect of IT on productivity is expanding from the richest countries into a large group of developing countries. The policy implication is that lower-tier developing countries can also expect productivity gains from IT investments, particularly through policies that support IT use, such as greater openness to foreign investment, increased investment in tertiary education, and reduced telecommunications costs.
Keywords: developed countries; developing countries; human resources; IT and productivity; longitudinal analysis; openness to trade and investment; production function; telecommunications cost; telecommunications infrastructure
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#148 0.446 productivity information technology data production investment output investments impact returns using labor value research results evidence spillovers industries analysis gains
#164 0.294 countries global developing technology international country developed national economic policy domestic study foreign globalization world government nations innovative technological especially
#16 0.074 infrastructure information flexibility new paper technology building infrastructures flexible development human creating provide despite challenge possible resources specific advances developing
#279 0.051 field work changes new years time change major period year end use past early century half traditional areas established strong