May
9, 2002, 4:00pm
Productivity
and Profitability of Information Technology
Presented
by Hal Varian
School of Information Management and Systems
University of California, Berkeley
Productivity growth is critical for the health of the
U.S. economy. Profitability is critical for the health of the private
sector. This talk describes the relationship between these two concepts
and summarizes the results of a survey, the Net Impact Study, that examined
the ways in which the Internet has impacted both productivity and profitability.
About the speaker:
Hal R. Varian is the Dean of the School of Information Management and
Systems at the University of California, Berkeley. He is also a Professor
in the Haas School of Business, a Professor in the Department of Economics,
and holds the Class of 1944 Professorship.
He received his S.B. degree from MIT in 1969 and his MA (mathematics)
and Ph.D. (economics) from UC Berkeley in 1973. Professor Varian is
fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation, the Econometric Society, and the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has served as Co-Editor of
the American Economic Review and is on the editorial boards of several
journals.
Professor Varian has published numerous papers in economic theory, industrial
organization, financial economics, econometrics and information economics.
He is the author of two major economics textbooks which have been translated
into 11 languages. He is the co-author of a bestselling book on business
strategy, Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy
and cwrites a monthly column for the The New York Times.
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