The Arrival of Fast Internet and Employment in Africa - Comment
David Roodman
No 148, I4R Discussion Paper Series from The Institute for Replication (I4R)
Abstract:
Hjort and Poulsen (2019) frames the staggered arrival of submarine Internet cables on the shores of Africa circa 2010 as a difference-in-differences natural experiment. The paper finds positive impacts of broadband on individual- and firm-level employment and nighttime light emissions. These results largely are not robust to alternative ge-ocoding of survey locations, to correcting for a satellite changeover at end-2009, and to revisiting a definition of the treated zone that has no clear technological basis, is narrower than the spatial resolution of nearly all the data sources, and is empirically suboptimal as a representation of the geography of broadband.
Date: 2024
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-afr, nep-dev, nep-geo, nep-ict and nep-ure
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https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/302282/1/I4R-DP148.pdf (application/pdf)
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Working Paper: The Arrival of Fast Internet and Employment in Africa: Comment (2024) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zbw:i4rdps:148
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