B. Hall, and B. Khan. Working Paper, 9730. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1050 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, (May 2003)
Abstract
The contribution of new technology to economic growth can only be realized when and if the new technology is widely diffused and used. Diffusion itself results from a series of individual decisions to begin using the new technology, decisions which are often the result of a comparison of the uncertain benefits of the new invention with the uncertain costs of adopting it. An understanding of the factors affecting this choice is essential both for economists studying the determinants of growth and for the creators and producers of such technologies. Section II of this article discusses the modeling of diffusion and Sections III to V explore the determinants of diffusion and the evidence for their importance.
%0 Report
%1 Hall2003
%A Hall, Bronwyn H.
%A Khan, Beethika
%C 1050 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138
%D 2003
%K
%N 9730
%T Adoption of New Technology
%U http://www.nber.org/papers/w9730
%X The contribution of new technology to economic growth can only be realized when and if the new technology is widely diffused and used. Diffusion itself results from a series of individual decisions to begin using the new technology, decisions which are often the result of a comparison of the uncertain benefits of the new invention with the uncertain costs of adopting it. An understanding of the factors affecting this choice is essential both for economists studying the determinants of growth and for the creators and producers of such technologies. Section II of this article discusses the modeling of diffusion and Sections III to V explore the determinants of diffusion and the evidence for their importance.
@techreport{Hall2003,
abstract = {The contribution of new technology to economic growth can only be realized when and if the new technology is widely diffused and used. Diffusion itself results from a series of individual decisions to begin using the new technology, decisions which are often the result of a comparison of the uncertain benefits of the new invention with the uncertain costs of adopting it. An understanding of the factors affecting this choice is essential both for economists studying the determinants of growth and for the creators and producers of such technologies. Section II of this article discusses the modeling of diffusion and Sections III to V explore the determinants of diffusion and the evidence for their importance.},
added-at = {2010-11-15T23:04:26.000+0100},
address = {1050 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138},
author = {Hall, Bronwyn H. and Khan, Beethika},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2784b3555539a12d304a7b7e2b9acfcfc/usman.qadir},
institution = {National Bureau of Economic Research},
interhash = {480a724d8bfe5f94f05afa2a0c4f222e},
intrahash = {784b3555539a12d304a7b7e2b9acfcfc},
keywords = {},
month = May,
number = 9730,
timestamp = {2010-11-15T23:04:26.000+0100},
title = {Adoption of New Technology},
type = {Working Paper},
url = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w9730},
year = 2003
}