All Stories

  1. National Wealth and the Subjective Well-Being of Nations
  2. The (social) innovation – subjective well-being nexus: subjective well-being impacts as an additional assessment metric of technological and social innovations
  3. A Proposal for a ‘National Innovation System Plus Subjective Well-Being’ Approach and an Evolutionary Systemic Normative Theory of Innovation
  4. Comprehensive versus inclusive wealth accounting and the assessment of sustainable development: An empirical comparison
  5. Information, capital, well-being
  6. Hamlet without the prince: the capital approach to development, the New Zealand Treasury's Living Standards Framework and policy making
  7. A Comparison of Macro-Level Sustainability Indices for OECD Countries: Conceptual and Measurement Issues
  8. A general model of the innovation - subjective well-being nexus
  9. Knowledge-based economies and subjective wellbeing
  10. Some empirics of the bivariate relationship between average subjective well-being and the sustainable wealth of nations
  11. Natural capital, subjective well-being, and the new welfare economics of sustainability: Some evidence from cross-country regressions
  12. Pathological Knowledge‐Based Economies: Towards a Knowledge‐Based Economy Perspective on the Current Crisis
  13. Internet-based ‘social sharing’ as a new form of global production: The case of SETI@home
  14. The (Un)Happiness of Knowledge and the Knowledge of (Un)Happiness: Happiness Research and Policies for Knowledge‐based Economies1
  15. The GATT/WTO has promoted trade, but only in capital-intensive commodities!
  16. THE ELUSIVE CONTRIBUTION OF ICT TO PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH IN NEW ZEALAND: EVIDENCE FROM AN EXTENDED INDUSTRY-LEVEL GROWTH ACCOUNTING MODEL
  17. ICT intensity and New Zealand’s productivity malaise: Is the glass half empty or half full?
  18. ICT Research, the New Economy, and the Evolving Discipline of Economics: Back to the Future?
  19. The transaction sector, the information economy, and economic growth in New Zealand: Taking hazledine seriously*
  20. Human Capital and Economic Growth: Cross-Section Evidence for OECD Countries
  21. The unintended consequences of using an MCI as an operational monetary policy target in New Zealand: Suggestive evidence from rolling regressions
  22. Human capital and international knowledge spillovers in TFP growth of a sample of developing countries: an exploration of alternative approaches
  23. TESTING DIFFERENT CLASSES OF ENDOGENOUS GROWTH MODELS: INDUSTRY EVIDENCE FOR THE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMY
  24. A logit model of the incidence of long-term unemployment
  25. Statistics for the information age
  26. Inflation crises, deflation, and growth: further evidence
  27. Gender and the Information Work Force: New Zealand Evidence and Issues
  28. Gender and the Information Work Force: New Zealand Evidence and Issues
  29. Towards a Knowledge Economy? Changes in New Zealand's Information Work Force 1976‐1996
  30. Structural Economics: Measuring Change in Technology, Lifestyles, and the Environment
  31. ReORIENT: Global Economy in the Asian Age
  32. A Comparative Macro-level Assessment of New Zealand's ‘National Innovation System’
  33. Economic Growth and Convergence Amongst the APEC Economies 1965-1990
  34. A communication perspective on the international information and knowledge system
  35. Business sector R&D and Australia's manufacturing trade structure
  36. A comparison and critical assessment of Porat and Rubin's information economy and Wallis and North's transaction sector
  37. International R&D spillovers, human capital and productivity in OECD economies: An empirical investigation
  38. Corporate Bureaucracies and United States Competitiveness
  39. International R&D spillovers amongst OECD economies
  40. THE IMPACT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE ON REAL WAGES IN U.S. MANUFACTURING, 1985–1989
  41. The Composition of the Human Capital Stock and the Factor Content of Trade: Evidence from West(ern) Germany
  42. The impact of international trade on the 'in-house' transaction sector: evidence from the United States, 1985-89
  43. Private bureaucracies, organizational efficiency, and Australia's manufacturing trade structure: a comparison with Japan
  44. Australia's industrial R&D expenditure and foreign trade
  45. New perspectives on intersectoral relationships between manufacturing and services
  46. Information Services, Private Bureaucracies, and Japan's Comparative Advantage
  47. Are purchased information services underused in manufacturing? Evidence from Japan, Korea and Taiwan
  48. A comparative analysis of the use of information inputs in the manufacturing sectors of Korea and Japan
  49. In-house information activities in an applied general equilibrium framework
  50. Analysis of the primary information sectors of Korea and Japan using computable general equilibrium models
  51. Information resources in U.S. manufacturing: A reassessment
  52. AN INFORMATION SECTOR PERSPECTIVE OF EMPLOYMENT EXPANSION IN THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA, 1975-80
  53. The Japanese information economy: Its quantification and analysis in a macroeconomic framework (with comparisons to the U.S.)
  54. From newly industrialising to newly informatising country: The primary information sector of the Republic of Korea 1975–1980
  55. AN EXPOSITION OF THE INFORMATION SECTOR APPROACH WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO AUSTRALIA