Using official data from the Australian Bureau of Economic Statistics and a formal growth accounting framework, this paper shows that the rapid accumulation of information processing and communication technology (ICT) capital over the last two decades in Australia has played a significant role in explaining the impressive, structural acceleration of labor productivity. The following statistical data are also included: household income, expenditure and savings, labor market, fiscal indicators, credit aggregates, capital and financial account, external assets and liabilities, export by commodity group, and so on.
Digital technologies such as fast computers, portable devices, remote sensors, and ‘smart’ machines ...
This paper uses a new set of country data for 14 countries, members of the OECD, and a non-parametri...
In the last 25 years or so Australia has experienced one of the longest economic booms in history, a...
This paper revisits the so-called ‘ICT-productivity paradox’ from a long-run perspective by using an...
In this paper we describe our investigation of the role of investment in information technology (IT)...
There have been calls for governments to foster the production of ICTs in Australia, in part to acce...
Seminal papers of Solow (1957) and Swan (1956) stimulated debate among economists on the role of tec...
This paper updates the research progress in investigating the relationships between information tech...
This paper empirically investigates and identifies the main contributing factors to output and produ...
This study examines sources of Australian labour productivity change from 1950 to 1994. Time-series ...
This paper investigates the cointegration and causal relationships between Information and Communica...
Considerable uncertainty hangs over the world economy at present, from which the Australian economy ...
This paper investigates the cointegration and causal relationships between Information and Communica...
This study examines sources of Australian labour productivity change from 1950 to 1994. Time-series ...
Purpose Despite the rapid pace of digitalization, aggregate productivity growth rates in most advanc...
Digital technologies such as fast computers, portable devices, remote sensors, and ‘smart’ machines ...
This paper uses a new set of country data for 14 countries, members of the OECD, and a non-parametri...
In the last 25 years or so Australia has experienced one of the longest economic booms in history, a...
This paper revisits the so-called ‘ICT-productivity paradox’ from a long-run perspective by using an...
In this paper we describe our investigation of the role of investment in information technology (IT)...
There have been calls for governments to foster the production of ICTs in Australia, in part to acce...
Seminal papers of Solow (1957) and Swan (1956) stimulated debate among economists on the role of tec...
This paper updates the research progress in investigating the relationships between information tech...
This paper empirically investigates and identifies the main contributing factors to output and produ...
This study examines sources of Australian labour productivity change from 1950 to 1994. Time-series ...
This paper investigates the cointegration and causal relationships between Information and Communica...
Considerable uncertainty hangs over the world economy at present, from which the Australian economy ...
This paper investigates the cointegration and causal relationships between Information and Communica...
This study examines sources of Australian labour productivity change from 1950 to 1994. Time-series ...
Purpose Despite the rapid pace of digitalization, aggregate productivity growth rates in most advanc...
Digital technologies such as fast computers, portable devices, remote sensors, and ‘smart’ machines ...
This paper uses a new set of country data for 14 countries, members of the OECD, and a non-parametri...
In the last 25 years or so Australia has experienced one of the longest economic booms in history, a...