The New ICT Ecosystem
Implications for Policy and Regulation
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:25th Mar '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An award-winning book that develops the idea of the ICT sector as an evolving ecosystem.
This award-winning book develops the idea of the ICT sector as an evolving ecosystem and shows how it works better in some countries and regions than in others. This allows readers to understand why some parts of this system are underperforming and what can be done to enhance their performance.The ICT sector is crucial as a driver of economic and social growth. Not only is it an important industry in its own right, but it also provides the communication and infrastructure without which modern economies could not function. How does this sector work? Why is it stronger in some countries than in others? What should companies, governments and regulators be doing to enhance its contribution? In The New ICT Ecosystem, Martin Fransman answers these and other questions by developing the idea of the ICT sector as an evolving ecosystem. He shows that some components of the ICT ecosystem, particularly the innovation process, work better in some countries and regions than in others. For example, the Internet content and applications layer of the ecosystem tends to work better in the US than in Europe or Asia. The analysis in this book enables policy makers and regulators to understand why some parts of the ICT ecosystem are underperforming and what can be done to enhance their performance. The previous edition of The New ICT Ecosystem won the 2008–10 Joseph Schumpeter Prize.
'This book can be considered one of the first attempts to apply complex system dynamics to understanding the economics of information and communication technologies. … Martin Fransman applies with extraordinary competence this analytical framework to study the emergence and dynamics of ICT as an eco-system characterized by endogenous dynamics … The empirical analysis of Martin Fransman confirms that complex systems dynamics enables us to make important progress, not only with respect to standard microeconomics, but also with respect to the Schumpeterian legacy and the evolutionary approach.' Cristiano Antonelli, Research Policy
ISBN: 9780521171205
Dimensions: 227mm x 152mm x 15mm
Weight: 450g
276 pages