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IT and the Economy Recent Research on Effects The Question Behind the Question • We don’t doubt, do we, that using IT brings “profit” to organizations. • Can we generalize that to other entities, such as countries? • What kind of “profit” can countries get from IT? • What prerequisites are necessary in order to obtain that profit? The Development Question: The Digital Divide • The term “digital divide” refers to two dichotomies: – Between rich countries that have a lot of technology and use it to generate wealth and poor countries who have no access – Within a country, to the fact that elites have access to IT while many (perhaps most) others do not. The Politics of the Question • Ministers of the Economy of third world countries have been saying for years that their countries need “access” to technology in order to improve their level of economic development (i.e., wealth) • The access they are talking about is IT (in the form of computers, communication, whatever). The Paradigm Poverty + IT = Wealth Is this true? Can poor countries become not-so-poor countries by “adding” IT? Let’s call this variable ECV Basic Question Let’s call this variable ITV • What is the relationship between some measure of IT use or penetration and the (state of) a country’s economy? • This question can be asked at two levels: – International: Does ITV cause differences between countries? – Intranational: Does ITV cause a difference within a given country Or Turn It Around • Maybe economic conditions have an effect on IT?. • Again, there are two levels for this question: – Does ECV influence ITV between countries? – Does ECV influence ITV within a given country Three Possible Answers to Each Question ECV ITV ECV ITV 1. Positive effect 2. Negative effect 3. No or negligible effect ITV • A measure of the pervasiveness of ICT in a society • Common measures – Teledensity – No. of computers per capita – Computer investment by business – No of Internet users – No of ISPs – Average computer investment per business ECV • A measure of the health or function of the economy of a society • Common measures – GNP or GNP per capita – Wealth distribution – Income distribution –? Measures adopted for This Study • ECV Income distribution: Gini Index A measure of how evenly distributed income is and indirectly (over time) the evenness of distribution of wealth; also a measure of economic opportunity or access to or participation in the economic system of a country • ITV Teledensity A measure of the connectivity of a society as a whole; how many telephone lines plus cellphones per 100 population; an indirect measure of access to communication. NOT directly a measure of computer pervasiveness, use or value Limitations of Measures • Income distribution: Gini Index Highly tied to income rather than wealth. Even highly skewed economies might support individuals in families or familycorporate type environments. Low Gini indices might arise from extremely high taxation, limiting choices or purchasing power. Access to wealth might not correlate with access to non-economic influence or value Gini is probably • Teledensity a highly nonlinear scale with floor and ceiling Concerns communication only, not use of computers. A small number of individuals might own or control an inordinately large proportion of the access to communication. Communication costs might be very high, favoring the wealthy and denying access to the poor. Intervening Variable • Income Level (GDP per capita per year) • Four Classifications: – Very Poor: <$2000 – Poor Between $2000 and $6000 – Developing Between $6000 and $21000 – Advanced Greater than $21000 • Similar to P, P and R Chapter 1, but with explicit values. There is some correlation The Results • Scattergram Plots countries’ position depending on Gini index and teledensity. High Gini index is towards the top and high teledensity is towards the right of the diagram. Figures are from the CIA Factbook and may represent approximations across a decade. Several countries are missing as there was no Gini index figure. The pair xy denotes a quadrant (LH means Low Gini index and High teledensity) • Interpretation Countries appear in only three of the four quadrants. There are no countries having high Gini Index and high teledensity. Therefore it seems as though no country can score high on both indices. HH is therefore probably not a transition status; hence evolution must be either LL to LH or HL to LL (and then to LH). It cannot be that Gini index falls lags behind teledensity rises(since there are no HH) Laos, Mozanbique, Yemen, Rwanda, Guinea, Senegal, Bangladesh (N=24/43) >60 Vietnam, Moldova, Ecuador, Egypt, China, Peru, Lebanon (N=37/55) Gini Index Class Thailand, Cyprus, Costa Rica, South Africa, Hungary, Portugal (N=29/48) 4060 US, UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Finland, Switzerland (N=17/22) 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 Poor: Annual GDP is less than $2000 Annual GDP is $2000-$6000 Gini Index Class >60 Very Poor: 4060 Developing Countries: Advanced Countries: Annual GDP between $6000 and $21000 Annual GDP exceeds $21000 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 >60 QUADRANTS Very Poor Gini Index Class Poor 4060 Developing Advanced 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 Undeveloped economies with internal digital divides and major elites Gini Index Class >60 4060 Developing or transition economies with internal digital divides but more resources Modernizing economies, without internal digital divides Advanced or Newly Industrialized economies with localized internal digital divides 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 >60 MIGRATION r = -0.235 ns. Gini Index Class r = -0.121 ns. r = - 0.031 ns. 4060 r = - 0.448 p=0.015 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 Questions • Why are there no countries in the ICTdivided quadrant? • What are the migration paths? • What are the forces that move countries among these categories? • Is it possible for ICT enhancement to cause Gini falls? MIGRATION In the wealthiest countries, there is little effect from increased teledensity; the most capable rather than everyone, benefit from the technology and dedistribution takes place. Similarly for poor countries. However, when some threashhold is reached, many start to gain access to the increased teledensity and begin redistributing the income through earnings at the bottom. For developing or “modernizing” countries, a certain level of income allows access to more or most inhabitants and thus a real redistribution of income takes effect. Gini Index Class >60 For very poor countries, an increase in teledensity without an average increase in income has no effect on income distribution, because the elite have all the access 4060 2040 <20 0-20 20-40 40-60 Teledensity Class >60 Implications • The development ministers are right, but it’s INTERNAL digital divides that prevent the benefits of access from bringing home the economic bacon. • There is a MEDIATED effect from seed wealth to technology to access to use of technology to increased income at lower levels to general redistribution, at which point “natural selection” might take over to cause de-distribution of income. What Is Happening • At low levels of income, only the elite have access to income-producing technology. • As incomes rise, the non-elite gain access to the technology and produce income, apparently redistributing some to the poorer segments • When incomes rise sufficiently, all who can profit from IT have it and now those who use it best make the most from it, creating what looks like a concentration of income again. The process Highly skewed income distribution Infusion of income Access to Technology at Cost Apparent redistribution of income Generation of income at ALL levels in society Access to others and information Diffusion of benefits throughout society Most capable acquire most benefits Some Concentration of income