Publication | Closed Access
Broadband connected employees and labour productivity: a comparative analysis of 14 European countries based on distributed Microdata access
35
Citations
24
References
2015
Year
Innovation AdoptionInformation Technology ConvergenceEducationTechnology AdoptionDigital DivideHuman Resource ManagementBusiness AnalyticsDistributed Microdata AccessProductivityInformation Technology ManagementManagementIct IntensityComparative AnalysisRemote WorkData ManagementStatisticsDigital EconomyWorkforce ProductivityGig EconomyLabour ProductivityInformation ManagementWorkforce DevelopmentCommunication TechnologyBusinessTechnologyUnemploymentBig DataEconomics Of Information
In this study, the association between information and communication technology (ICT) intensity in firms and labour productivity is explored across 14 European countries for the years 2001–2010. ICT intensity is approximated by the proportion of broadband internet-enabled employees, a novel indicator measuring not only adoption but also diffusion within and among firms. Data have been retrieved by means of the distributed microdata approach (DMD) from registers on business, trade and education as well as from surveys on production, ICT usage and innovation activities in firms held at the national statistical offices. This pioneering approach allows access to otherwise confidential linked firm-level information in dimensions not earlier available. Pooled OLS estimations based on approximately 400,000 observations in harmonised and representative datasets show that in a majority of countries there is a significant and positive relationship between the proportion of broadband internet-enabled employees and labour productivity in firms. However, the strength of the relationship varies across countries and industries. Manufacturing firms receive 50% larger estimates than the services firms, while the latter instead experience the positive association more frequently.
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