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Think the Internet Leads to Growth?

Think Again
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-06-17/think-the-internet-leads-to-growth-think-again hass associates review articles Think the Internet Leads to Growth? Think Again Remember the year 2000 in the months after the Y2K bug had been crushed, when all appeared smooth sailing in the global economy? When the miracle of finding information online was so novel that The Onion ran an article, Area Man Consults Internet Whenever Possible? It was a time of confident predictions of an ongoing economic and political renaissance powered by information technology. Jack Welchthen the lauded chief executive officer of General Electric (GE)had suggested the Internet was the single most important event in the U.S. economy since the Industrial Revolution. The Group of Eight highly industrialized nationsat that point still relevantmet in Okinawa in 2000 and declared, IT is fast becoming a vital engine of growth for the world economy. Enormous opportunities are there to be seized by us all. In a 2000 report, then-President Bill Clintons Council of Economic Advisers suggested (PDF), Many economists now posit that we are entering a new, digital economy that could inaugurate an unprecedented period of sustainable, rapid growth. It hasnt quite worked out that way. Indeed, if the last 10 years have demonstrated anything, its that for all the impact of a technology like the Internet, thinking that any new innovation will set us on a course of high growth is almost certainly wrong. Thats in part because many of the studies purporting to show a relationship between the Internet and economic growth relied on shoddy data and dubious assumptions. In 1999 the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland released a study that concluded (PDF), the fraction of a countrys population that has access to the Internet is, at least, correlated with factors that help to explain average growth performance. It did so by demonstrating a positive relationship between the number of Internet users in a country in 1999 with gross domestic product growth from 1974 to 1992. Usually we expect the thing being caused (growth in the 1980s) to happen after the things causing it (1999 Internet users). In defense of the Fed, researchers at the World Bank recently tried to repeat the same trick. They estimated that a 10 percent increase in broadband penetration in a country was associated with a 1.4 percentage point increase in growth rate. This was based on growth rates and broadband penetration from 1980 to 2006. Given that most deployment of broadband occurred well after the turn of the millennium, the only plausible interpretation of the results is that countries that grew faster from 1980 to 2006 could afford more rapid rollouts of broadband. Yet the study is widely cited by broadband boosters. Many are in denial about the failure of the IT revolution to spark considerable growth. Innovation in information technology has hardly dried up since 2000. YouTube (GOOG) was founded in 2005, and Facebook (FB) is only a year older. Customer-relations manager Salesforce.com (CRM), the first cloud-based solution for business, only just predates the turn of the millennium. And there are now 130 million smartphones in the U.S., each with about the same computing power as a 2005 vintage desktop. Meanwhile, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce (PDF), retail e-commerce as a percentage of total retail sales has continued to climbe-commerce sales were more than 6 percent of

the total by the fourth quarter of 2012, up from less than 2 percent in 2003. Yet despite continuing IT innovation, weve seen few signs that predictions of an unprecedented period of sustainable, rapid growth are coming true. U.S. GDP expansion in the 1990s was a little faster than the 1980sit climbed from an annual average of 3 percent to 3.2 percent. But GDP growth collapsed to 1.7 percent from 2000 to 2009. Northwestern University economist Robert Gordon notes that U.S. labor productivity growth spiked brieflyrising from 1.38 percent from 1972 to 1996 to 2.46 percent from 1996 to 2004but fell to 1.33 percent from 2004 and 2012. Part of the labor productivity spike around the turn of the century was because of the rapidly increasing efficiency of IT production (you get a lot more computer for the same cost nowadays). Another part was because of considerable investments in computers and networks across the economywhat economists call capital deepening. But even during the boom years it was near-impossible to see an economywide impact of IT on total factor productivityor the amount of output we were getting for a given input of capital and labor combined. Within the U.S., investment in the uses of the Internet for business applications had an impact on wage and employment growth in only 6 percent of countiesthose that already had high incomes, large populations, high skills, and concentrated IT use before 1995, according to a recent analysis (PDF) by Chris Forman and colleagues in the American Economic Review. Investments in computers and software did yield a return for most companiesbut the return wasnt anything special. hass associates review articles Think the Internet Leads to Growth? Think Again More Aarticles: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/hass-associates-4854820 http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/95364-hass-associates

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