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Productivity and Digitilization in Europe: Paving the Road to Faster Growth

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TLDR
In this article, the authors reviewed the latest evidence on the contribution of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and the digital economy more broadly on economic growth for Europe and the United States since the late 1990s until most recently and found that the slowing of the total factor productivity growth rate in Europe reflects a failure to effectively adopt new technologies and innovation.
Abstract
This paper reviews the latest evidence on the contribution of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) – and the digital economy more broadly – on economic growth for Europe and the United States since the late 1990s until most recently. The paper provides estimates on the contributions from ICT to growth from three channels affecting the long-term growth performance of entire economies: 1) a productivity effect through the ICT-producing sector, 2) an investment effect from ICT-using industries through capital deepening, and 3) a productivity effect from an efficiency rise through the use of ICT which goes beyond the direct capital deepening effect. The study finds that the slowing of the total factor productivity growth rate in Europe reflects a failure to effectively adopt new technologies and innovation. It is also argued that the lack of rapid accumulation of intangible capital (such as information assets, innovative property, and economic competencies) constrains Europe's ability to accelerate and facilitate the innovation effects from digital technology. Finally, we discuss some policy implication emerging from our work, in particular the need to complete the Single Market in Europe to improve the productivity effects from the digital economy.

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References
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Posted Content

How to Compete: The Impact of Workplace Practices and Information Technology on Productivity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impact of workplace practices, information technology and human capital investments on productivity and found that what is associated with higher productivity is not so much whether or not an employer adopts a particular work practice but rather how that work practice is actually implemented within the establishment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intangible Assets: Computers and Organizational Capital

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the hypothesis that new, intangible organizational assets complement IT capital just as new production processes and factory redesign complemented the adoption of electric motors over 100 years ago.
Book

Secular stagnation: facts, causes and cures

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