Link[1] The great transformer: The impact of Internet on economic growth and prosperity
En citant: James Manyika, Charles Roxburgh - McKinsey Global Institute Cité par: David Price 4:33 PM 30 October 2011 GMT
Citerank: (15) 121535Economic growth and developmentHow can the benefits of a secure cyberspace for international economic growth and development be realised?8FFB597, 121826Enhanced productivity959C6EF, 121889Cultivate technological innovationAn environment that encourages innovation and entrepreneurshipâincluding access to start-up capital, protection of intellectual property rights, support for R&D and , and world-class research universities and government-funded teamâis vital to capturing Internet-related growth.109FDEF6, 121890Accessible, globally linked networksA solid internet infrastructure is a prerequisite for growth; creating the platforms upon which users and organizations experience the Internet and upon which entrepreneurs and businesses innovate.109FDEF6, 121905Two billion people are connected to the internet now109FDEF6, 121906Almost $8 trillion exchange hands each year through e-commerce109FDEF6, 121907Internet accounts for 3.4% of GDP in large and developed economiesInternet accounts for, on average, 3.4 percent of GDP across the large economies that make up 70 percent of global GDP.109FDEF6, 121908Internet sector GDP weight now greater than agriculture or utilities109FDEF6, 121910Rising living standards linked to maturity of the Internet ecosystemThere is a clear connection between the maturity of the Internet ecosystem and rising living standards.1198CE71, 121911Transformed the value chain in almost all sectorsThe Internet has enabled fundamental business transformations that span the entire value chain in virtually all sectors and types of companiesânot just online ones.959C6EF, 121912Internet creates more jobs than it eliminates959C6EF, 121913In France the Internet has created 2.4 jobs for every one eliminated Detailed analysis of the French economy showed that while the Internet is reported to have destroyed 500,000 jobs over the past 15 years, it created 1.2 million new ones, a net addition of 2.4 jobs for every one destroyed.1198CE71, 121914McKinseyâs global SME survey found 2.6 jobs created for each one lostMcKinseyâs global SME survey found that the Internet had created 2.6 jobs for every one destroyed.1198CE71, 121930Online prices are on average 10% lower than offline pricesPreliminary research shows online prices are, on average, 10% lower than their offline counterparts as a result of the price transparency that search tools offer. The economic surplus captured by consumers from web services alone ranges from $18 a month per user in Germany to $28 in the UK.1198CE71, 121935Foster competitionCountries that make their markets more open and competitive achieve greater productivity. Such competition ensures that the most innovative and productive companies create more attractive products and services for users and gain market share at the expense of the less productive.109FDEF6 URL:
|
Extrait - In the advanced economies we studied, the Internet accounted for 10 percent of GDP growth over the past 15 years, and its influence is growing. Over the past five years, the Internetâs contribution to GDP growth in these countries doubled to 21 percent. If we include the large, emerging economies of China, India, and Brazil, the Internet contributed 7 percent of growth over the past 15 years and 11 percent over the past five. |