The Global Internet Economy

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2003-02-01
Publisher(s): Mit Pr
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Summary

By 2002, all but a handful of countries were connected to the Internet. The intertwining of the Internet and the globalization of finance, corporate governance, and trade raises questions about national models of technology development and property rights. The sudden ability of hundreds of millions of users to gain access to a global communication infrastructure spurred the creation of new firms and economic opportunities. The Internet challenged existing institutions and powerful interests: Technology was global, but its economic and business development was molded in the context of prevailing national institutions. Comparing the experiences of seven countries -- France, Germany, India, Japan, Sweden, South Korea, and the United States -- this book analyzes the rise of the Internet and its impact on changing national institutions. Each country chapter describes how the Internet developed, evaluates the extent to which the Silicon Valley model was adopted, and suggests why certain sectors and technologies developed faster than others. The book also analyzes specific Internet sectors and regulations across countries. It shows that the Internet's effects are more evolutionary than revolutionary. At the same time, the impact of broad cultural change on entrepreneurial aspirations is clearly visible in certain nations, especially India and Sweden.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. ix
List of Contributorsp. xiii
Introduction: The Internet Has Bordersp. 1
Country Chapters
From Pockets of Experimentation to Institutional Changep. 43
The Growth and Development of the Internet in the United Statesp. 69
Sweden's Wireless Wonders: The Diverse Roots and Selective Adaptations of the Swedish Internet Economyp. 109
Technological National Learning in France: From Minitel to Internetp. 153
Creativity under Constraint: Technological Imprinting and the Migration of Indian Business to the New Economyp. 191
The German Internet Economy and the "Silicon Valley Model": Convergence, Divergence, or Something Else?p. 223
The Internet Economy of Koreap. 263
Between Bit Valley and Silicon Valley: Hybrid Forms of Business Governance in the Japanese Internet Economyp. 291
Cross-cutting Themes
Is There Global Convergence in Regulation and Electronic Markets?p. 329
Suppliers and Intermediariesp. 331
Regulation in Europep. 381
Non-Market Strategies and Regulation in the United Statesp. 407
Conclusionsp. 437
Referencesp. 473
Indexp. 509
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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