2 minute read

References

levels in activities that can be contracted to suppliers of intermediate inputs, depending on the quality of the contracting institutions in the country. 8. Bakos and Brynjolfsson (1993) developed a model that explains the decisions to outsource based on new opportunities brought about by information and communication technologies. ICT lowers coordination costs, which in turn facilitates outsourcing of tasks domestically or abroad (offshoring). Using data for US manufacturing firms, Fort (2017) finds that the adoption of ICT technologies between 2002 and 2007 is associated with a 3.1 percentage point increase in its probability of outsourcing. This effect is 20 percent higher in industries with production specifications that are easier to codify in an electronic format.

References

Acemoglu, D., P. Antràs, and E. Helpman. 2007. “Contracts and Technology Adoption.” American

Economic Review 97 (3): 916–43. Bakos, J. Y., and E. Brynjolfsson. 1993. “From Vendors to Partners: Information Technology and

Incomplete Contracts in Buyer-Supplier Relationships.” Journal of Organizational Computing 3 (3): 301–28. Coase, R. H. 1937. “The Nature of the Firm.” Economica 4 (16): 386–405. Conley, T. G., and C. R. Udry. 2010. “Learning about a New Technology: Pineapple in Ghana.”

American Economic Review 100 (1): 35–69. Demsetz, H. 1997. “The Firm in Economic Theory: A Quiet Revolution.” American Economic Review 87 (2): 426–29. Duflo, E., M. Kremer, and J. Robinson. 2011. “Nudging Farmers to Use Fertilizer: Theory and

Experimental Evidence from Kenya.” American Economic Review 101 (6): 2350–90. Fort, T. C. 2017. “Technology and Production Fragmentation: Domestic versus Foreign Sourcing.”

Review of Economic Studies 84 (2): 650–87. Fuglie, K., M. Gautam, A. Goyal, and W. F. Maloney. 2020. Harvesting Prosperity: Technology and

Productivity Growth in Agriculture. World Bank Productivity Project series. Washington, DC:

World Bank. Griliches, Z. 1957. “Hybrid Corn: An Exploration in the Economics of Technological Change.”

Econometrica 25 (4): 501–22. Grossman, S. J., and O. D. Hart. 1986. “The Costs and Benefits of Ownership: A Theory of Vertical and

Lateral Integration.” Journal of Political Economy 94 (4): 691–719. Hjort, J., D. Moreira, G. Rao, and J. F. Santini. 2021. “How Research Affects Policy: Experimental

Evidence from 2,150 Brazilian Municipalities.” American Economic Review 111 (5): 1442–80. Mansfield, E. 1963. “Intrafirm Rates of Diffusion of an Innovation.” Review of Economics and Statistics 45 (4): 348–59. Schwab, Klaus. 2016. The Fourth Industrial Revolution. New York: Crown Business. Suri, T. 2011. “Selection and Comparative Advantage in Technology Adoption.” Econometrica 79 (1): 159–209. Taglioni, D., and D. Winkler. 2016. Making Global Value Chains Work for Development.

Washington, DC: World Bank Group. Williamson, O. E. 1981. “The Economics of Organization: The Transaction Cost Approach.” American

Journal of Sociology 87 (3): 548–77. World Bank. 2020. World Development Report 2020: Trading for Development in the Age of Global Value

Chains. Washington, DC: World Bank.

PART 2

The Implications of the Technological Divide for Long-Term Economic Growth

This article is from: