ABSTRACT

The diffusion of information and communication technologies is rapidly changing the structure of advanced economies, raising new problems of technological unemployment. The view that market forces can easily counterbalance the labour-saving impact of innovation is contrasted in this book with empirical findings on aggregate compensation effects and on the consequences of product, process and organizational innovation in industries and services. After examining several policy aspects, new employment-friendly economic and innovation policies are proposed.

chapter 3|18 pages

Modelling the employment impact of innovation

Do compensation mechanisms work?

chapter 4|33 pages

Growth and employment

Productivity gains versus demand constraints

chapter 6|25 pages

Organisational innovations, computerisation and employment

Evidence from American manufacturing

chapter 7|28 pages

Innovation and employment in services

Results from the Italian innovation survey

chapter 8|16 pages

New technology, growth and job creation

The role of learning strategies

chapter 10|25 pages

Compensation mechanisms and targeted economic growth

Lessons from the history of economic policy