Summary
The objective of my proposal is to push the frontier of our understanding of how the adoption of information and communication technologies (ICT) affects the internal organization of firms and thus firm productivity, employees’ careers and wages; how ICT adoption affects the organization of firms’ global value chains (GVC) and thus domestic employee outcomes; and how ICT adoption affects the foreign sourcing of innovation and thus domestic innovation.
Existing research gives only partial answers to these questions as it provides limited insights into the economic mechanisms behind the effects of ICT adoption and the organization of GVC. Research is impeded by lack of data with exhaustive information on ICT, GVC, and firm and employee outcomes.
My proposal will change that. I will assemble novel, comprehensive data sets with specific information on firms’ ICT use, GVC, balance sheets, and patents, as well as all employees’ characteristics, tasks, and wages. I will break new ground by developing theory and conducting theory-based empirical analyses that both identify causal effects and shed light on the economic mechanisms behind them.
My proposal consists of three parts. Part 1 exploits unique features of my data to study how ICT adoption induces firms to reorganize employees. I will analyse changes to task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages within employees over time to explore complementarities between higher availability of information due to ICT and employee knowledge.
Part 2 quantifies the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring, and, for the first time, studies how ICT adoption and offshoring jointly affect the task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages of employees, testing the predictions of task-based models.
Part 3 evaluates the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring of research and development (R&D), a key determinant of growth, and derives and tests novel conditions under which foreign R&D complements or substitutes domestic innovation.
Existing research gives only partial answers to these questions as it provides limited insights into the economic mechanisms behind the effects of ICT adoption and the organization of GVC. Research is impeded by lack of data with exhaustive information on ICT, GVC, and firm and employee outcomes.
My proposal will change that. I will assemble novel, comprehensive data sets with specific information on firms’ ICT use, GVC, balance sheets, and patents, as well as all employees’ characteristics, tasks, and wages. I will break new ground by developing theory and conducting theory-based empirical analyses that both identify causal effects and shed light on the economic mechanisms behind them.
My proposal consists of three parts. Part 1 exploits unique features of my data to study how ICT adoption induces firms to reorganize employees. I will analyse changes to task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages within employees over time to explore complementarities between higher availability of information due to ICT and employee knowledge.
Part 2 quantifies the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring, and, for the first time, studies how ICT adoption and offshoring jointly affect the task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages of employees, testing the predictions of task-based models.
Part 3 evaluates the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring of research and development (R&D), a key determinant of growth, and derives and tests novel conditions under which foreign R&D complements or substitutes domestic innovation.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101076790 |
Start date: | 01-08-2023 |
End date: | 31-07-2028 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 1 486 378,00 Euro - 1 486 378,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
The objective of my proposal is to push the frontier of our understanding of how the adoption of information and communication technologies (ICT) affects the internal organization of firms and thus firm productivity, employees’ careers and wages; how ICT adoption affects the organization of firms’ global value chains (GVC) and thus domestic employee outcomes; and how ICT adoption affects the foreign sourcing of innovation and thus domestic innovation.Existing research gives only partial answers to these questions as it provides limited insights into the economic mechanisms behind the effects of ICT adoption and the organization of GVC. Research is impeded by lack of data with exhaustive information on ICT, GVC, and firm and employee outcomes.
My proposal will change that. I will assemble novel, comprehensive data sets with specific information on firms’ ICT use, GVC, balance sheets, and patents, as well as all employees’ characteristics, tasks, and wages. I will break new ground by developing theory and conducting theory-based empirical analyses that both identify causal effects and shed light on the economic mechanisms behind them.
My proposal consists of three parts. Part 1 exploits unique features of my data to study how ICT adoption induces firms to reorganize employees. I will analyse changes to task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages within employees over time to explore complementarities between higher availability of information due to ICT and employee knowledge.
Part 2 quantifies the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring, and, for the first time, studies how ICT adoption and offshoring jointly affect the task complexity and autonomy, careers and wages of employees, testing the predictions of task-based models.
Part 3 evaluates the effect of ICT adoption on offshoring of research and development (R&D), a key determinant of growth, and derives and tests novel conditions under which foreign R&D complements or substitutes domestic innovation.
Status
SIGNEDCall topic
ERC-2022-STGUpdate Date
31-07-2023
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