THE INFORMATION AGE: IMPLICATIONS FOR U.S. AGRICULTURE
W. Richard Goe and
Martin Kenney
Review of Policy Research, 1986, vol. 6, issue 2, 260-272
Abstract:
The U.S. agricultural system is on the verge of a technological revolution that will involve biotechnology and computer‐based information technology. As the U.S. economy is being transformed through the growing computerelectronics industry, agricultural applications of computer technology, which include the microcomputer and videotex information retrieval networks, are becoming established agricultural inputs. The emergence of agriculture into the Information Age promises to have significant impacts on the economic and social welfare of the farmer as well as rural banking and postal systems, and agrimarketing and agriinput firms. A development which will shape the impact of information technology is the growing trend toward privatizing information which could result in agricultural information being transformed into a purchased agricultural input. This promises to undermine many public agricultural service activities. The penetration of information technology in agriculture along with the privatization of agricultural information has the potential of accelerating the forces which are consolidating farms and changing the face of agriculture.
Date: 1986
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