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The Third Industrial Revolution in global business

Contributor(s): Publication details: 2013 Cambridge University Press New YorkDescription: xiii, 343 pISBN:
  • 9781139625791
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 302.231 T4
Online resources: Summary: "The essays in this volume probe the impact the digital revolution has had, or sometimes failed to have, on global business. Has digital technology, the authors ask, led to structural changes and greater efficiency and innovation? While most of the essays support the idea that the information age has increased productivity in global business, the evidence of a "revolution" in the ways industries are organized is somewhat more blurred, with both significant discontinuities and features which persist from the "second" industrial revolution. ... There is little doubt that over the last three decades the world economy has witnessed the emergence of a cluster of new technologies--that is, a new, broad, techno-economic paradigm in the sense of Freeman and Perez (1988)--centered on electronic-based information and communication technologies. Such ICT technologies did not only give rise to new industries but, even more importantly, deeply transformed incumbent industries (and for that matter also service activities), their organizational patterns, and their drivers of competitive success".
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eBooks Vikram Sarabhai Library Non-fiction Electronic Resources 302.231 T4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available ER000380

"The essays in this volume probe the impact the digital revolution has had, or sometimes failed to have, on global business. Has digital technology, the authors ask, led to structural changes and greater efficiency and innovation? While most of the essays support the idea that the information age has increased productivity in global business, the evidence of a "revolution" in the ways industries are organized is somewhat more blurred, with both significant discontinuities and features which persist from the "second" industrial revolution. ... There is little doubt that over the last three decades the world economy has witnessed the emergence of a cluster of new technologies--that is, a new, broad, techno-economic paradigm in the sense of Freeman and Perez (1988)--centered on electronic-based information and communication technologies. Such ICT technologies did not only give rise to new industries but, even more importantly, deeply transformed incumbent industries (and for that matter also service activities), their organizational patterns, and their drivers of competitive success".

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