EIB Working Paper 2020/07 - The growing digital divide in Europe and the United States
Rückert, Désirée
EIB Working Paper 2020/07 - The growing digital divide in Europe and the United States Volume 2020/7 Désirée Rückert, Christoph Weiss, European Investment Bank, Reinhilde Veugelers. - 1 online resource (1 p.) - EIB Working Papers . - EIB Working Papers .
Access copy available to the general public.
Using the EIBIS Digital and Skills Survey on digitalisation activities of firms in the EU and the US, this study confirms the trend toward a growing digital divide in the corporate landscape with, on one side, many firms that are not digitally active, and on the other side, a substantial number of digitally active firms forging ahead. Old small firms, with less than 50 employees and more than 10 years old, are significantly more likely to be persistently digitally non-active. We show that these persistently non-digital firms are less likely to be innovative, increase employment or command higher mark-ups. These trends are likely to exacerbate the digital divide across firms in the EU and the US.
9789286146831
https://doi.org/10.2867/222528
Business & Economics / Finance
Economics
Electronic books.
EIB Working Paper 2020/07 - The growing digital divide in Europe and the United States Volume 2020/7 Désirée Rückert, Christoph Weiss, European Investment Bank, Reinhilde Veugelers. - 1 online resource (1 p.) - EIB Working Papers . - EIB Working Papers .
Access copy available to the general public.
Using the EIBIS Digital and Skills Survey on digitalisation activities of firms in the EU and the US, this study confirms the trend toward a growing digital divide in the corporate landscape with, on one side, many firms that are not digitally active, and on the other side, a substantial number of digitally active firms forging ahead. Old small firms, with less than 50 employees and more than 10 years old, are significantly more likely to be persistently digitally non-active. We show that these persistently non-digital firms are less likely to be innovative, increase employment or command higher mark-ups. These trends are likely to exacerbate the digital divide across firms in the EU and the US.
9789286146831
https://doi.org/10.2867/222528
Business & Economics / Finance
Economics
Electronic books.