Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries

The aim of this study is to investigate the ICT impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries. Empirical studies of the role of ICT as one of the main determinants of productivity growth, for developing countries have produced disagreement. To help clear up the subject, this paper e...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ljiljana Lovrić
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Faculty of Economics University of Rijeka 2012-12-01
Series:Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
Subjects:
ICT
EU
Online Access:http://www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/01-lovric-2012-2.pdf
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spelling doaj-638a12c1694f4c649f2251853d7c09542020-11-25T03:22:16ZdeuFaculty of Economics University of RijekaZbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu1331-80042012-12-01302223245Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countriesLjiljana LovrićThe aim of this study is to investigate the ICT impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries. Empirical studies of the role of ICT as one of the main determinants of productivity growth, for developing countries have produced disagreement. To help clear up the subject, this paper employs a Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) through a dynamic panel data approach on the sample of 25 European developed and developing countries over the period of 2001-2010. The results indicate a positive and significant impact of ICT on labor productivity growth in developed and developing countries, but the terms of impact in developing countries rely on human capital, a contribution of a higher educational level, advanced research qualifications and development activity. Comparing to developed countries, the growth accounting approach indicate that developing countries have similar relative ICT contribution to labor productivity growth, but their average growth rate of labor productivity is 6.8 times higher. The main conclusion is that education, especially of higher levels, is the critical factor of productivity and growth of EU developing countries and that must be taken as development policy implication in these countries.www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/01-lovric-2012-2.pdfICTlabor productivity growthEUGeneralized Method of Moments (GMM)
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ljiljana Lovrić
spellingShingle Ljiljana Lovrić
Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
ICT
labor productivity growth
EU
Generalized Method of Moments (GMM)
author_facet Ljiljana Lovrić
author_sort Ljiljana Lovrić
title Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
title_short Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
title_full Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
title_fullStr Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries
title_sort information-communication technology impact on labor productivity growth of eu developing countries
publisher Faculty of Economics University of Rijeka
series Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
issn 1331-8004
publishDate 2012-12-01
description The aim of this study is to investigate the ICT impact on labor productivity growth of EU developing countries. Empirical studies of the role of ICT as one of the main determinants of productivity growth, for developing countries have produced disagreement. To help clear up the subject, this paper employs a Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) through a dynamic panel data approach on the sample of 25 European developed and developing countries over the period of 2001-2010. The results indicate a positive and significant impact of ICT on labor productivity growth in developed and developing countries, but the terms of impact in developing countries rely on human capital, a contribution of a higher educational level, advanced research qualifications and development activity. Comparing to developed countries, the growth accounting approach indicate that developing countries have similar relative ICT contribution to labor productivity growth, but their average growth rate of labor productivity is 6.8 times higher. The main conclusion is that education, especially of higher levels, is the critical factor of productivity and growth of EU developing countries and that must be taken as development policy implication in these countries.
topic ICT
labor productivity growth
EU
Generalized Method of Moments (GMM)
url http://www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/01-lovric-2012-2.pdf
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