Details

Digitalisation and Development


Digitalisation and Development

Issues for India and Beyond

von: Dibyendu Maiti, Fulvio Castellacci, Arne Melchior

58,84 €

Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 03.12.2019
ISBN/EAN: 9789811399961
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p></p><p>This book investigates the impact of information and communication technologies (ICTs) on development and well-being (beyond economic benefits) and highlights some emerging issues relating to the realities, constraints and digital divides with particular reference to India. It collects a series of novel contributions, studying the Indian experience in an international cross-country perspective. The book also discusses economic, social, and behavioural aspects of well-being as well as access to ICTs across regions, states and individuals to account for the digital divide. The book establishes an aggregate relationship between ICT exposure and well-being at the country level and addresses a number of fundamental issues, such as whether ICT raises the level of transparency and governance. Based on case studies and anecdotal evidence, it then further assesses the effective implementation of service delivery through ICT innovations.</p>

<p>The book is divided into four parts: Theintroductory part surveys the literature and presents background information on the Indian case; introduces the main themes on the relationships between ICT, socio-economic development and digital divides; and provides a summary and roadmap to the chapters of the book. Part II focuses on the impact of ICT on economic performance, including economic growth, productivity and trade. Part III examines the extent of the digital divides in India, including international, regional as well as inter-personal inequality. Finally, Part IV investigates the impact of ICT on governance, users’ well-being and social outcomes. Combining insights from analyses of a variety of socio-economic dimensions related to digitalisation, this book is relevant for a wide range of scholars and researchers across disciplines, as well as practitioners and policy-makers. While the book has a main focus on India, various contributions take an international cross-country comparative perspective, and the results have general relevance for digitalisation and development. On the whole, the main message of this book is that the impact of ICTs is contingent upon other assets, capabilities and institutional conditions. National policies should, therefore, not only promote digitalization as such but also ensure its co-evolution and complementarity with a variety of other country-specific factors.</p>

<p>Chapter 'Digitalisation and Development: Issues for India and Beyond' of this book is available open<i>&nbsp;</i>access under a&nbsp;CC BY 4.0&nbsp;license at link.springer.com</p><p></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p><div><p></p></div>
<b>SECTION I:&nbsp;ICT, Digital Divide and Development</b>.-&nbsp;Economics of ICT, Digital Divide and Development – Some Emerging Issues.- ICT and Wellbeing: A Cross Country Analysis.- Digital Divide: How India and China Stack up?.- Evolution of Inter-state disparities in the use of ICT: A study of Indian States.- Is India Digitally Divided? Identifying the Determinants of ICT Diffusion at the Household level.- <b>SECTION II:&nbsp;ICT and Economic Sector</b>.-<b>&nbsp;</b>Impact of Communication Sector in Indian Economy: An Input-Output Analysis.- Technological Disruptions and the Indian IT Industry: Responding to New Challenges.- IT Enabling Indian Firms: The importance of IT Outsourcing Companies.- Time Zone Differences and Service Trade.- <b>SECTION III:&nbsp;ICT and Social Sector</b>.-&nbsp;Effect of ICT on the Performance of Indian States in Terms of Socio-economic Indicators.- <b>SECTION IV:&nbsp;ICT and Institution</b>.- Red Tape, Corruption and ICT.- ICT of Multinational Company Products and its Impact of Consumption Behaviour in the Era of Globalisation.- Screen Game, Physical Activity and Academic Self-Efficacy.&nbsp;<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p></p><p><b>Dibyendu Maiti</b> is Associate Professor of Economics at Delhi School of Economics. Before joining at Delhi School, he worked at the University of the South Pacific (Fiji), Institute of Economic Growth, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences (Calcutta), the University of Manchester (UK). He held various research positions at Max Planck Institute of Economics (Jena, Germany), University of Nottingham, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, University of Oslo, Norwegian Institute of International. He publishes articles in<i> Journal of Development Economics, Economic Modelling, Labour Economics, Journal of Productivity Analysis, Cambridge Journal of Economics, American Behavioural Scientists, Journal of International Trade and Economic Development</i> etc. He received the IDRC Indian Young Social Scientist Award 2009 and Global Development Network Award 2010. Currently, he is an associate editor of <i>Progress in Development Studies</i> (Sage) from 2018. He worked on research projects sponsored by ICSSR, WTO, ESRC, DFID and serves the national and international organisation as a consultant.</p>

<p><b>Fulvio Castellacci</b> is Director of the TIK Centre for Technology, Innovation and Culture at the University of Oslo. He has a PhD in Innovation Studies (University of Oslo, 2004) and a PhD ("Dottorato di Ricerca") in Economics (University of Rome La Sapienza, 2005). He was Senior Research Fellow at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) since 2007, and Head of Department of International Economics at NUPI between 2008 and 2014. Since 2014, he has been working as Director of the TIK Centre at the University of Oslo. His research interests are within the economics of innovation, and specifically on the patterns and socio-economic impacts of R&D and technological innovation at the firm, sector and country-levels of analysis. His research is published in major journals in this field, e.g. Research Policy, Industrial and Corporate Change, and World Development.</p><p></p>

<p><b>Arne Melchior</b> is Senior Research Fellow at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Oslo, Norway, where he has headed the Research Group on International Economics and Trade for extended periods, and managed a large number of research projects focusing on international trade. He holds a PhD in international economics from the University of Oslo (1997) and a Certificate of Advanced European Studies at College of Europe, Belgium. His research focuses on international trade, trade policy and economic geography, with a large number of books, articles, policy-related and popular publications. Work in recent years includes studies of Russia, China, India and Western Europe and the use of large-scale numerical models. The book “Free Trade Agreements and Globalisation: In the Shadow of Brexit and Trump” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018) uses a new model of the world economy in the analysis of world trade and trade agreements. Melchior also has extensive experience from university teaching as well as academic and popular presentations in Norway and abroad, as well as an early career dealing with international trade negotiations.</p><p></p>

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<p>&nbsp;</p><br><p></p>
<p></p><p>This book investigates the impact of information and communication technologies (ICTs) on development and well-being (beyond economic benefits) and highlights some emerging issues relating to the realities, constraints and digital divides with particular reference to India. It collects a series of novel contributions, studying the Indian experience in an international cross-country perspective. The book also discusses economic, social, and behavioural aspects of well-being as well as access to ICTs across regions, states and individuals to account for the digital divide. The book establishes an aggregate relationship between ICT exposure and well-being at the country level and addresses a number of fundamental issues, such as whether ICT raises the level of transparency and governance. Based on case studies and anecdotal evidence, it then further assesses the effective implementation of service delivery through ICT innovations.</p><p>The book is divided into four parts: The introductory part surveys the literature and presents background information on the Indian case; introduces the main themes on the relationships between ICT, socio-economic development and digital divides; and provides a summary and roadmap to the chapters of the book. Part II focuses on the impact of ICT on economic performance, including economic growth, productivity and trade. Part III examines the extent of the digital divides in India, including international, regional as well as inter-personal inequality. Finally, Part IV investigates the impact of ICT on governance, users’ well-being and social outcomes. Combining insights from analyses of a variety of socio-economic dimensions related to digitalisation, this book is relevant for a wide range of scholars and researchers across disciplines, as well as practitioners and policy-makers. While the book has a main focus on India, various contributions take an international cross-country comparative perspective, and the results have general relevance for digitalisation and development. On the whole, the main message of this book is that the impact of ICTs is contingent upon other assets, capabilities and institutional conditions. National policies should, therefore, not only promote digitalization as such but also ensure its co-evolution and complementarity with a variety of other country-specific factors.</p><p>Chapter 'Digitalisation and Development: Issues for India and Beyond' of this book is available open<i>&nbsp;</i>access under a&nbsp;CC BY 4.0&nbsp;license at link.springer.com<br></p><p></p>
Addresses the economic benefits of digitalisation, but also the digital divides across nations, regions and people Shows how the gains from ICT depend on skills and institutions, and this interaction is key to the developmental impact of ICT Applies scientific methodologies and insights from various disciplines to address issues of development and well-being Relevant for a range of fields including development studies, economics, innovation studies, public policies and information sciences