Information And Communication Technology And The Measurement Of Volume Output And Final Demand - A Five-Country Study
Paul Schreyer
Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 2001, vol. 10, issue 5, 339-376
Abstract:
Information and communication technology (ICT) products have undergone rapid technical change. Where quality improvements occur, they should be reflected in official price and quantity indices, otherwise there is a tendency to over-estimate price movements and under-estimate volume changes of ICT products. Statistical offices deal with this issue but the degree and nature of quality-adjustment of price indices of ICT products varies considerably between OECD countries. The present study simulates measurement effects on key economic variables (real output, private final consumption, government expenditure, investment, exports and imports) and productivity, under the assumption that the price indices of ICT products are fully quality-adjusted. The paper draws on a large selection of empirical studies to identify differences between quality-adjusted and unadjusted price changes and uses detailed information from input-output tables to assess their weights in final demand. Effects on GDP and its components are quantified for five selected OECD countries.
Keywords: Productivity; National Income (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2001
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DOI: 10.1080/10438590100000014
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