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- catalog alternative "Croissance début de siècle. English".
- catalog contributor b13151050.
- catalog created "2004.".
- catalog date "2004".
- catalog date "2004.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2004.".
- catalog description "A shared vision 1 -- Beyond the myths 2 -- A kaleidoscopic approach 3 -- 1 A social construct and an analytical challenge 5 -- The American economy in the 1990s was no longer the same as that in the 1960s 5 -- Combining micro- and macroeconomics, history and geography 8 -- The difficulty of analysing structural changes in real time 9 -- 2 Microeconomic instability and an uncertain organizational model 14 -- Digitalized information and redundant networks 14 -- The three figures of the 'new economy' 17 -- The search for an organizational model for the 'new economy' 19 -- 3 A growth regime driven by information and communications technology? 26 -- The new and the old economies: a conjunction of two virtuous circles? 26 -- The Solow paradox has not been entirely resolved yet 28 -- Faster potential growth: problems with forecasting 33 -- The 'new economy' has had different effects on different sectors 36 -- 4".
- catalog description "Genealogy of the 'new economy': the institutional change at the heart of the US trajectory 44 -- 1973-2000: the long search for successors to the Fordist growth regime 44 -- An early deregulation of the product market 51 -- Increasingly competitive labour markets 53 -- ICT as a way of overcoming management problems in large companies 55 -- The peace dividend 57 -- A new architecture for economic policy 58 -- Multiform financial innovations 60 -- Internationalization underpinned internal US dynamics 62 -- Should other countries adopt the institutional architecture of the USA? 63 -- 5 The geography of the 'new economy': the diversity of institutional architectures 65 -- ICT at the heart of the technological change process 65 -- Pre-conditions for virtuous growth: two configurations 68 -- Was the US configuration exemplary or just singular? 70 -- Three institutional configurations 71 --".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "Is it necessary to produce ICT in order to know how to use them? 73 -- 6 2000-2002: reassessing the potential of ICT-driven growth 77 -- The Internet bubble: from boom to burst 77 -- Traders and economists forget the lessons of history at their own peril 86 -- Consecutive technological paradigms do not resemble one another 90 -- 7 The long-term historical outlook after the Internet bubble 101 -- Overestimating ICT's role 101 -- The end of three major myths 105 -- Inequalities within and between countries: down with technological determinism 107 -- An uncertain mode of regulation 109 -- The opposition between the old and the new economy is obsolete 115 -- 8 The emergence of an anthropogenetic model 120 -- ICT as the vector of real-time management? 120 -- Moving towards a network economy? 124 -- The transition towards a knowledge economy? 128 -- In the long run: an anthropogenetic model 136 --".
- catalog description "The future lasts for a long time 145 -- Behind the success of the 'new economy': a crisis already in the making 145 -- Multiform institutional changes rather than technological determinism 147 -- The geography of the 'new economy' actually includes the Nordic countries 147 -- ICT is already a mature industry 148 -- The power of Wall Street instead of Silicon Valley 149 -- Altered competition but no return to mythical competitive markets 150 -- Between speculation and utopia: the anthropogenetic model 151.".
- catalog extent "xvii, 174 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Future of economic growth.".
- catalog identifier "184376606X".
- catalog isFormatOf "Future of economic growth.".
- catalog isPartOf "Saint-Gobain Centre for Economic Studies series.".
- catalog isPartOf "Saint-Gobain Centre for Economic Studies".
- catalog issued "2004".
- catalog issued "2004.".
- catalog language "eng fre".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Cheltenham,UK; Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar,".
- catalog relation "Future of economic growth.".
- catalog subject "338.9 22".
- catalog subject "Economic development.".
- catalog subject "Economic forecasting.".
- catalog subject "Economic history 20th century.".
- catalog subject "HD83 .B69313 2004".
- catalog subject "Information technology.".
- catalog tableOfContents "A shared vision 1 -- Beyond the myths 2 -- A kaleidoscopic approach 3 -- 1 A social construct and an analytical challenge 5 -- The American economy in the 1990s was no longer the same as that in the 1960s 5 -- Combining micro- and macroeconomics, history and geography 8 -- The difficulty of analysing structural changes in real time 9 -- 2 Microeconomic instability and an uncertain organizational model 14 -- Digitalized information and redundant networks 14 -- The three figures of the 'new economy' 17 -- The search for an organizational model for the 'new economy' 19 -- 3 A growth regime driven by information and communications technology? 26 -- The new and the old economies: a conjunction of two virtuous circles? 26 -- The Solow paradox has not been entirely resolved yet 28 -- Faster potential growth: problems with forecasting 33 -- The 'new economy' has had different effects on different sectors 36 -- 4".
- catalog tableOfContents "Genealogy of the 'new economy': the institutional change at the heart of the US trajectory 44 -- 1973-2000: the long search for successors to the Fordist growth regime 44 -- An early deregulation of the product market 51 -- Increasingly competitive labour markets 53 -- ICT as a way of overcoming management problems in large companies 55 -- The peace dividend 57 -- A new architecture for economic policy 58 -- Multiform financial innovations 60 -- Internationalization underpinned internal US dynamics 62 -- Should other countries adopt the institutional architecture of the USA? 63 -- 5 The geography of the 'new economy': the diversity of institutional architectures 65 -- ICT at the heart of the technological change process 65 -- Pre-conditions for virtuous growth: two configurations 68 -- Was the US configuration exemplary or just singular? 70 -- Three institutional configurations 71 --".
- catalog tableOfContents "Is it necessary to produce ICT in order to know how to use them? 73 -- 6 2000-2002: reassessing the potential of ICT-driven growth 77 -- The Internet bubble: from boom to burst 77 -- Traders and economists forget the lessons of history at their own peril 86 -- Consecutive technological paradigms do not resemble one another 90 -- 7 The long-term historical outlook after the Internet bubble 101 -- Overestimating ICT's role 101 -- The end of three major myths 105 -- Inequalities within and between countries: down with technological determinism 107 -- An uncertain mode of regulation 109 -- The opposition between the old and the new economy is obsolete 115 -- 8 The emergence of an anthropogenetic model 120 -- ICT as the vector of real-time management? 120 -- Moving towards a network economy? 124 -- The transition towards a knowledge economy? 128 -- In the long run: an anthropogenetic model 136 --".
- catalog tableOfContents "The future lasts for a long time 145 -- Behind the success of the 'new economy': a crisis already in the making 145 -- Multiform institutional changes rather than technological determinism 147 -- The geography of the 'new economy' actually includes the Nordic countries 147 -- ICT is already a mature industry 148 -- The power of Wall Street instead of Silicon Valley 149 -- Altered competition but no return to mythical competitive markets 150 -- Between speculation and utopia: the anthropogenetic model 151.".
- catalog title "Croissance début de siècle. English".
- catalog title "The future of economic growth : as new becomes old / Robert Boyer.".
- catalog type "text".