The business value of information technology and inputs substitution: The productivity paradox revisited

被引:63
|
作者
Lin, Winston T.
Shao, Benjamin B. M.
机构
[1] SUNY Buffalo, Sch Management, Buffalo, NY 14260 USA
[2] Arizona State Univ, WP Carey Sch Business, Dept Informat Syst, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
information technology; IT investments; productivity paradox; technical efficiency; CES production function; substitutability; complementarity;
D O I
10.1016/j.dss.2005.10.011
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
The business value of information technology (IT) is an extremely important but highly controversial issue that has sparked a great deal of research during the past two decades. Closely related to the issue are the productivity paradox of information systems and the substitutability of IT stock for both traditional capital and labor. Numerous studies have been undertaken to either explain or dispel the paradox. This paper represents one significant extension to previous work and is a further effort to jointly investigate the business value issue, the paradox, and the potential of the substitution between IT capital and ordinary capital and labor, by estimating the IT business value in terms of the impact of IT on technical efficiency, based on the constant elasticity of substitution (known as CES) stochastic production frontier model, at three levels: firm, industry, and sector. The major findings include: the relationship between technical efficiency and IT investment is not robust with respect to the specifications of production frontiers; the productivity paradox is still existent, inconsistent with conventional wisdom, IT has substantial impacts on the five parameters associated with the CES production process; IT stock, traditional capital, and traditional labor are not pairwise substitutable; IT stock appears to be as important as capital, but it is not possible to use IT stock to replace the role of labor entirely; decreasing returns to scale are found irrespective of the levels of IT investments, and technical efficiency tends to decrease as IT investments increase; the industry-level analysis suggests that IT capital is more important for the services industries than for the manufacturing industries; and the sector analysis seems to indicate that the services sector is just slightly less technically efficient than the manufacturing sector. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:493 / 507
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] INCREASING THE IMPACTS OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY USAGE ON BUSINESS VALUE
    Prayitno, Agus
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUSINESS AND SOCIETY, 2020, 21 (02): : 679 - 692
  • [32] How information technology creates value in business management
    Kadono, Y
    Terano, T
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIFTH JOINT CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION SCIENCES, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2000, : A883 - A886
  • [33] The business value of information technology - an overview of empirical research
    Potthof, I
    WIRTSCHAFTSINFORMATIK, 1998, 40 (01): : 54 - +
  • [34] The correlation between outsourcing and the business value of information technology
    Gefen, D
    Senn, JA
    ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAS CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 1998, : 514 - 516
  • [35] An upper echelons perspective on information technology business value
    Fernando Lopez-Munoz, Jose
    Escriba-Esteve, Alejandro
    EUROPEAN RESEARCH ON MANAGEMENT AND BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2017, 23 (03) : 173 - 181
  • [36] A framework for assessing the business value of information technology infrastructures
    Kumar, RL
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2004, 21 (02) : 11 - 32
  • [37] Co-creating business value of information technology
    Jiang, Yi
    Zhao, Jing
    INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT & DATA SYSTEMS, 2014, 114 (01) : 53 - 69
  • [38] Composition and value of returned industrial information technology equipment revisited
    Grenchus, E
    Keene, R
    Luce, R
    Nobs, C
    2002 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ELECTRONICS & THE ENVIRONMENT, CONFERENCE RECORD, 2002, : 214 - 217
  • [39] Business-IT alignment: productivity paradox payoff?
    Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, CT, United States
    Ind Manage Data Sys, 8 (367-373):
  • [40] Business-IT alignment: productivity paradox payoff?
    Papp, R
    INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT & DATA SYSTEMS, 1999, 99 (7-8) : 367 - 373