Internet economics and policy: An Australian perspective

Publicly available information indicates that the demand and supply of Internet and Internet related services are continuing to expand at a rapid pace. Since 1997 the number of Internet service providers (facilities based and resellers) has increased by nearly 40 per cent; the number of points of pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Madden, Gary, Coble-Neal, Grant
Format: Journal Article
Published: Blackwell Publishing Asia 2002
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44828
Description
Summary:Publicly available information indicates that the demand and supply of Internet and Internet related services are continuing to expand at a rapid pace. Since 1997 the number of Internet service providers (facilities based and resellers) has increased by nearly 40 per cent; the number of points of presence per Internet service provider has increased by five times; the number of hosts connected to the Internet has more than quadrupled; and Internet traffic has increased from six to 10 times. The emergence of electronic commerce (e commerce), driven by this rapid adoption of Internet services and continual technological innovation, is likely to have profound economic and social impacts on Australian society. This paper provides a detailed analysis of the impact of the Internet and e commerce, ranging from the changes in the market structure of the telecommunications industry, its role in changing the organisation of traditional markets, the emergence of new markets, and the structural shifts to employment, productivity and trade. The paper also analyses contemporary Australian regulatory responses.