- Home
- Publications
- ICT And Productivity Resurgence: A Growth Model For The Information Age
ICT and Productivity Resurgence: A Growth Model for the Information Age


Authors
Related Themes
Productivity, Trade, and Regional EconomiesJournal
The B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics (Contributions), No. 1, Vol. 7
Since the mid-1990s, extraordinary advances in semiconductors have enhanced the embodied nature of information technology, fuelling efficiency growth in computers and communication equipment industries. The consequent fall in prices has enabled the rapid diffusion of these new technologies, which have reached the critical threshold to foster productivity growth. In light of the recent growth pattern of the United States, this paper presents a model where the endogenous engine of development is the learning-by-doing process stemming from the usage of ICT for investment and consumption. Based on a two-sector framework (à la Whelan) that distinguishes between ICT-producers and -users, the model yields a sound representation of the stylized facts of the Information Age.
Related Blog Posts



Uncovering Scotland’s Productivity Performance
Ana Rincon-Aznar
Adrian Pabst
03 Oct 2022
5 min read

Why is UK Productivity Low and How Can It Improve?
Issam Samiri
Stephen Millard
26 Sep 2022
9 min read
Related Projects
Related News
Related Publications

Labour Regulation and Productivity in the UK since 1945: Debunking Myths about ‘Disease’, ‘Miracles’ and ‘Puzzles’
16 May 2023
National Institute Economic Review

Finance, Business Investment and Productivity
11 May 2023
UK Economic Outlook Box Analysis


Related events

Productivity Commission Evidence Session: Examining the Role of International Investment

High Dimensional Forecasting And It’s Pitfalls – M. Hashem Pesaran

Finance and Growth Workshop

Productivity Commission Evidence Session: The Role of Public Investment in Growth

Productivity Commission Evidence Session: The Underperformance of Business Investment

Productivity Commission Evidence Session: What and How Can Productivity Be Improved?

Productivity Commission Evidence Session on International Best Practice

Productivity after Covid-19

