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oapen-20.500.12657-577452022-08-03T03:09:51Z Neuvermessung der Datenökonomie Straubhaar, Thomas Economy World economy productivity Globalization Data economy bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLC Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500::HBLC1 Medieval history The coronavirus has questioned many old principles. This also applies to the measurement of economic activities. Methods from the heyday of industrialisation no longer fit to the structural change, first towards a service society, later towards a digital economy and now towards a data economy. A reorientation is urgently needed. This is the focus of this book. The first part deals with the extent to which the current measurement of economic activities - i.e. in particular the gross domestic product and productivity data derived from it - is accompanied by problems that lead to analytical errors in diagnosing and forecasting economic developments. The second part provides an overview of new empirical approaches that can be used to better capture what is happening in the (data) economy. 2022-08-02T12:43:17Z 2022-08-02T12:43:17Z 2021 book ONIX_20220802_9783943423914_30 1865-7974 9783943423914 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/57745 ger Edition HWWI application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9783943423914.pdf https://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hupwp/cart/?add-to-cart=1332&quantity=1 Hamburg University Press 10.15460/HUP.HWWI.6.212 The coronavirus has questioned many old principles. This also applies to the measurement of economic activities. Methods from the heyday of industrialisation no longer fit to the structural change, first towards a service society, later towards a digital economy and now towards a data economy. A reorientation is urgently needed. This is the focus of this book. The first part deals with the extent to which the current measurement of economic activities - i.e. in particular the gross domestic product and productivity data derived from it - is accompanied by problems that lead to analytical errors in diagnosing and forecasting economic developments. The second part provides an overview of new empirical approaches that can be used to better capture what is happening in the (data) economy. 10.15460/HUP.HWWI.6.212 35685259-3553-4bae-af55-685815864a93 9783943423914 6 200 Hamburg open access
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