Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam
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2007Corporate Author/ s
UN.ESCAP
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RT Generic T1 Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam A1 Trung, Tran Quoc, Tungm, Nguyen, Duc, Le Thuc, Duc, Nguyen Cao, Hung, Tran Hao YR 2007 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/1430 PB United Nations AB The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs. OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam AU - Trung, Tran Quoc, Tungm, Nguyen, Duc, Le Thuc, Duc, Nguyen Cao, Hung, Tran Hao Y1 - 2007 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/1430 PB - United Nations AB - The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs. @misc{20.500.12870_1430 author = {Trung, Tran Quoc, Tungm, Nguyen, Duc, Le Thuc, Duc, Nguyen Cao, Hung, Tran Hao}, title = {Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam}, year = {2007}, abstract = {The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/1430} } @misc{20.500.12870_1430 author = {Trung, Tran Quoc, Tungm, Nguyen, Duc, Le Thuc, Duc, Nguyen Cao, Hung, Tran Hao}, title = {Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam}, year = {2007}, abstract = {The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs.}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/1430} } TY - GEN T1 - Trade liberalization and development in ICT sector and its impact on household welfare in Viet Nam AU - Trung, Tran Quoc, Tungm, Nguyen, Duc, Le Thuc, Duc, Nguyen Cao, Hung, Tran Hao UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/1430 PB - United Nations AB - The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs.Metadata
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ARTNeT Working Paper
No. 33, February 2007
No. 33, February 2007
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Abstract
The term of “information society” was first introduced by Malchup and Porat in the 1970s. Since then information has increasingly been considered as a critical factor in the development process. Various scholars have used information deficiencies to explain development differences among countries and argued that information and communication technologies (ICTs) 1 may facilitate and speed up the development process by providing cheaper and more efficient ways and tools of information gathering, processing and dissemination. They are helping accelerate productivity gains and access to health information or educational services, and are modifying the way people learn and interact, and exchange and voice their interests. It is impossible for a developing country to integrate into the “global information society” if that country has not an adequate access to ICTs.