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Digital divide, craft firms’ websites and urban-rural disparities—empirical evidence from a web-scraping approach

Digital Divide, Websites von Handwerksunternehmen und städtisch-ländliche Disparitäten – empirische Erkenntnisse aus einer Web-Scraping Analyse

Anita Thonipara, Rolf Sternberg, Till Proeger and Lukas Haefner ()
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Anita Thonipara: Georg-August-University Goettingen
Till Proeger: Georg-August-University Goettingen
Lukas Haefner: Leibniz University Hannover

Review of Regional Research: Jahrbuch für Regionalwissenschaft, 2023, vol. 43, issue 1, No 3, 69-99

Abstract: Abstract Following the “death of distance” postulate, digitalization may reduce or even eliminate the penalty of firms being located in rural areas compared with those in urban agglomerations. Despite many recent attempts to measure digitalization effects across space, there remains a lack of empirical evidence regarding the adoption of digital technologies from an explicit spatial perspective. Using web-scraping data for a sample of 345,000 small firms in Germany, we analyze the determinants of website prevalence. Comparing urban with rural areas, we show that running a website—as a proxy for the degree of digitalization of the respective firm—is highly dependent on location, whereby firms in urban areas are almost twice as likely to run websites compared with those located in rural areas. Our county-level analysis shows that a high population density, a young population and a high educational level have a positive and significant association with the probability that firms run websites. Surprisingly, we find a negative and significant association of gross domestic product per capita with website prevalence, which is driven by urban regions. There are no differences between urban, semi-urban and rural areas in terms of website up-to-dateness as well as social media prevalence. We conclude that there is a substantial digital divide and discuss policy implications.

Keywords: Digital divide; Digitalization; Rural; Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises; Urban; Web-scraping (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)

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DOI: 10.1007/s10037-022-00170-5

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