Investments in Information Technology: Indirect Effects and Information Technology Intensity

Information Systems Research, 20,1 (March 2009)

15 Pages Posted: 19 Jun 2006 Last revised: 29 May 2015

See all articles by Dr. Neeraj Mittal

Dr. Neeraj Mittal

Independent

Barrie R. Nault

University of Calgary - Haskayne School of Business

Date Written: April 12, 2006

Abstract

Many studies measure the value of information technology (IT) by focusing on how much value is added rather than on the mechanisms that drive value addition. We argue that value from IT arises not only directly through changes in the factor input mix but also indirectly through IT-enabled augmentation of non-IT inputs and changes in the underlying production technology. We develop an augmented form of the Cobb- Douglas production function to separate and measure different productivity-enhancing effects of IT. Using industry-level data from the manufacturing sector, we find evidence that both direct and indirect effects of IT are significant. Partitioning industries into IT-intensive and non-IT-intensive, we find that the indirect effects of IT predominate in the IT-intensive sector. In contrast, the direct effects of IT predominate in the non-IT intensive sector. These results indicate structural differences in the role of IT in production between industries that are IT-intensive and those that are not. The implication for decision-makers is that for IT-intensive industries the gains from IT come primarily through indirect effects such as the augmentation of non-IT capital and labor.

Keywords: IT productivity, indirect effects, IT investment, output elasticity, technological change, production theory

Suggested Citation

Mittal, Neeraj and Nault, Barrie R., Investments in Information Technology: Indirect Effects and Information Technology Intensity (April 12, 2006). Information Systems Research, 20,1 (March 2009), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=909300 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.909300

Neeraj Mittal

Independent

United States

Barrie R. Nault (Contact Author)

University of Calgary - Haskayne School of Business ( email )

2500 University Drive, NW
Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://ucalgary.ca/bnault