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Om de transparantie en informatieverstrekking te bevorderen, publiceert het FPB regelmatig de methoden en resultaten van zijn werkzaamheden. De publicaties verschijnen in verschillende reeksen, zoals de Vooruitzichten, de Working Papers en de Planning Papers. Sommige rapporten kunnen ook hier geraadpleegd worden, evenals de nieuwsbrieven van de Short Term Update die tot 2015 werden gepubliceerd. U kunt op thema, publicatietype, auteur en jaar zoeken.

De macro-economische impact van ICT : economische trendgroei,conjunctuurcyclus en NAIRU [ Working Paper 02-03 - ]

Despite the major corrections of technology stock prices over the past two years, which signalled the end of the ict hype of the late 1990s, there remains a large consensus that the economic importance of ict for firms and households only stands to increase. In order to clarify the linkages through which ict can affect economic activity, this paper discusses the possible impact of ict on three important measures of macroeconomic activity: long-run economic growth, cyclical growth and the nairu. The channels linking technical progress and economic activity are outlined and applied to ict. The discussion is largely theoretical but is illustrated with available results for Belgium.

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  Auteurs

Willem Van Zandweghe (A)
 
A : Auteur, C : Contribuant

  Publicatietype

Working Papers

De Working Paper presenteert een studie of analyse die het FPB op eigen initiatief uitvoert.

First, the long-run impact of ict on macroeconomic growth has been the subject of many studies. In this literature, ict may positively affect economic growth by increasing labour productivity gains. Labour productivity growth may accelerate thanks to fast technical progress in the ict producing sectors, and thanks to the rapid accumulation of ict capital in the rest of the economy that results from the ensuing price declines of ict capital goods. More controversially, the diffusion of ict may also stimulate total factor productivity growth. Through these channels, ict can constitute a major stimulus for long-run productivity growth, as has been the case in the United States. The available evidence for Belgium suggests that, although labour productivity growth did not accelerate in the late 1990s, the adoption of these technologies by Belgian firms has led the growth contribution of ict capital to nearly double between the first and second half of the 1990s.

Second, ict may affect the cyclical economic growth around its trend. The impact the adoption of ict may have on the business cycle runs through at least two channels. Through the first channel, ict help to improve firms' inventory control. Just-in-time inventory control systems have led to a stabilisation of inventory investment, a small but very volatile component of aggregate demand. The second channel runs through gross investment of the business sector, another volatile component of aggregate demand. This channel has opposing effects, however: on the one hand ict increases gross investment because ict capital goods are characterised by large depreciation rates. On the other hand this fast depreciation may reduce the volatility of gross investment, as it allows adjusting investment plans faster after an economic shock. The direction of the overall effect is an empirical question.

Third, the possible impact of the increasing use of ict on the nairu is considered. The nairu is the unemployment rate consistent with stable inflation, and forms an important part of business cycle theory. The diffusion of ict may affect the nairu through three channels. Firstly, the nairu may temporarily fall if productivity growth accelerates but real wage claims adjust only gradually. Secondly, it may rise as a result of the asymmetric effects of increasing ict use on the unemployment of skilled and unskilled workers. Finally, the nairu may vary as a result of changes in the job matching technology. Although in the United States the combination of accelerated productivity growth and inert aspiration wages may have been of overriding importance, in Belgium the pernicious impact of ict on low-skilled workers may dominate the overall effect of ict on the nairu. However, this remains again a challenging empirical question.

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