Publication | Closed Access
Should the Personal Computer Be Considered a Technological Revolution? Evidence from U.S. Metropolitan Areas
225
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
EngineeringInnovation AdoptionTechnological RevolutionTechnology AdoptionTechnology ChangePhilosophy Of TechnologyTechnology AssessmentPc AdoptionDigital DivideCommunicationProductivityPc Diffusion EraTechnology DiffusionEconomic AnalysisPersonal Computer BeDiffusion Of InnovationTechnology TransferEconomicsHistory Of TechnologyTechnical ChangeInformation SocietyUser ExperienceU.s. Metropolitan AreasTechnological ChangeSocial ComputingUrban EconomicsBusinessEconometricsHuman-computer InteractionTechnology
The introduction and diffusion of personal computers are widely viewed as a technological revolution. Using U.S. metropolitan area–level panel data, this paper asks whether links between PC adoption, educational attainment, and the return to skill conform to a model of technological revolutions in which the speed and extent of adoption are endogenous. The model implies that cities will adjust differently to the arrival of a more skill-intensive means of production, with the returns to skill increasing most where skill is abundant and its return is low. We show that the cross-city data fit many of the predictions of the model during the period 1980–2000, the PC diffusion era.
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