internet penetration
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Author(s):  
Korhan Kocak ◽  
Özgür Kıbrıs

Abstract As internet penetration rapidly expanded throughout the world, press freedom and government accountability improved in some countries but backslid in others. We propose a formal model that provides a mechanism that explains the observed divergent paths of countries. We argue that increased access to social media makes partial capture, where governments allow limited freedom of the press, an untenable strategy. By amplifying the influence of small traditional media outlets, higher internet access increases both the costs of capture and the risk that a critical mass of citizens will become informed and overturn the incumbent. Depending on the incentives to retain office, greater internet access thus either forces an incumbent to extend capture to small outlets, further undermining press freedom; or relieve pressure from others. We relate our findings to the cases of Turkey and Tunisia.


2022 ◽  
pp. 319-340
Author(s):  
Nurul Hamizah Md.Saleh ◽  
Heru Susanto

The people in Brunei are digitally connected every day. Brunei recorded itself with the highest internet penetration (95%) in Southeast Asia. However, the local e-commerce industry seems to be still at infancy stage although the idea of e-commerce is not new here. Bruneians shop at global e-commerce sites, purchase from local social sellers, and commission online personal shoppers. But why are local e-commerce brands struggling although they are also providing similar business? Thus, this chapter aims to find out the ways to improve and strive in the Brunei market – What is the problem? What is missing? What can be done? The researcher aims to dissect the root issues and provide recommendations as the e-commerce strategy. The motivation for this research is in the effort to support the government continuous initiatives to curb unemployment in this country; e-commerce industry as the enabler for self-employment, entrepreneurship, and job creation contributes to the economic growth.


2022 ◽  
pp. 1075-1086
Author(s):  
Qinfeng Zhu ◽  
Marko M Skoric ◽  
Tai-Quan Peng

This article examines citizens' use of the Internet as a popular feedback mechanism, and argues that it can help improve institutional performance. Specifically, it assesses the relationship between Internet penetration rate and public service delivery across 31 first-level administrative divisions in People's Republic of China from 1997 to 2014. A hierarchical linear modelling was conducted using secondary data released by the National Bureau of Statistics and the China Internet Network Information Centre. The result shows a positive relationship between Internet penetration rate and public service delivery when controlling for GDP per capita and education level. The positive relationship increases over time in general. The implications of Internet use for performance-based legitimacy and its impact on political change (or stability) in the authoritarian context are further discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-14
Author(s):  
Titis Shinta Dhewi ◽  
Syihabudhin Syihabudhin ◽  
Afwan Hariri Agus Prohimi ◽  
Dediek Tri Kurniawan

Internet penetration in Indonesia has become an opportunity for business actors to increase their sales through online marketing. Especially in the field of marketing, the current digital era online marketing is becoming a very high trend among the public. In the midst of the development of digital technology, the team from Department of Management, Universitas Negeri Malang (UM) held training with a coaching approach for digital marketing. The target participants in this service are alumni of the management department on UM who own and are running a business. This training was carried out in two stages with the topics of (1) digital marketing and (2) digital business and digital transformation for its sustainability, the service team also developed an android-based application platform for the alumni of the management department on UM.


Author(s):  
Vadim E. Belenkov

This research paper aims at learning whether Internet penetration and online censorship affect repression against civil society organization (CSO) capacity to prevent street protest events and/or reduce protest participant numbers in the long term. Although there is a large corpus of studies on the consequences of the Internet and social media development for street protest mobilization, there is little empirical research on whether offline CSO repression works in the age of the Internet and whether this new repression impact is modified by attempts to organize online censorship. I tried to solve this problem with large-N cross-national datasets on protest participation, CSO repression and online censorship as well as on the share of Internet users from 1990 to 2018. I propose a set of hypotheses claiming that repression has a negative unconditional effect on street protest probability and protester numbers, that the Internet penetration makes repression effect less negative or more positive, and that online censorship transforms repression impact into more negative and less positive. I test these hypotheses with pooled linear and logistic regressions weighted by inverse probability of loss to follow-up. The results demonstrate that when the repression effect exists, an uncensored Internet makes the weak repression effect positive and transforms highly severe repression effects from negative to null. Online censorship at a high level of Internet use only removes the positive effect of weak repression. Acknowledgments: The reported study was funded by RFBR and EISR, project number 21-011-32120.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Prateek Kalia ◽  
Adil Zia ◽  
Dušan Mladenović

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate if country development indicators, i.e. gross domestic product per capita (GDPPC), literacy rate, internet penetration and urban population, influence the generation of e-waste on a global level. The moderation effect due to differences between countries in terms of absence or presence of e-waste policy and level of development is also checked.Design/methodology/approachThis is an archival study that builds upon data from United Nations (UN), World Bank and Global E-waste Statistics Partnership. The authors did a path analysis comprising mediation and multigroup analyses to decipher the proposed rese arch model containing data from 172 countries.FindingsThe results indicate that GDPPC, literacy rate, internet penetration and urban population do not directly influence the generation of e-waste. However, higher internet penetration in developing countries leads to higher e-waste, while higher literacy rates in developed countries suppress e-waste generation. When it comes to e-waste policy, a higher urban population without a regulatory legal framework boosts higher e-waste. The authors observed that higher internet penetration leads to higher e-waste in the presence of e-waste policy as well.Originality/valueThis is the first study to include economic well-being indicators in elaborating e-waste generation, on a global scale. No previous study has observed differences between countries nested in e-waste policy and level of development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 342-342
Author(s):  
Yang Li ◽  
Jan Mutchler ◽  
Edward Miller ◽  
Jing Jian Xiao ◽  
Reginald Tucker-Seeley

Abstract Despite a large body of literature documenting the association between individual characteristics and financial literacy, our understanding of the impact of macro-environmental conditions on individual financial literacy remains limited, particularly in later life. Drawing from a micro-macro perspective on the social environment and individual processes, we examined the extent to which three state-level contextual characteristics were associated with individual later-life financial literacy in the United States: tertiary educational attainment, poverty prevalence, and Internet penetration. We utilized data from the 2019 Understanding America Study (UAS) for adults aged 50 years or older to assess financial literacy (n=2,930), and data from the American Community Survey to evaluate contextual conditions. The UAS is a nationally representative survey panel supported by the Social Security Administration and the National Institute on Aging. Cross-sectional multilevel regression models were used to examine the hypothesized effects. We found that state-level poverty prevalence was negatively associated with individual financial literacy while state-level Internet penetration was positively associated with individual financial literacy, over and above individual characteristics known to impact financial literacy. No association was found between state-level educational attainment and individual financial literacy after controlling for respondents’ own education. Findings suggest that the social environment may condition financial literacy in later life through exposure to opportunities that promote knowledge acquisition. Interventions to enhance later-life financial literacy may benefit from targeted approaches that take into account the environmental characteristics of their locations of residence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-35
Author(s):  
David R. Agrawal

If online transactions are tax free, increased online shopping may lower tax rates as jurisdictions seek to reduce tax avoidance; but, if online firms remit taxes, online sales may put upward pressure on tax rates because internet sales help enforce destination-based taxes. I find that higher internet penetration generally results in lower municipal tax rates but raises tax rates in some jurisdictions. The latter effect emerges in states where many online vendors remit taxes. A 1 standard deviation increase in internet penetration lowers local sales taxes in large municipalities by 0.15 percentage points, or 16 percent of the average rate. (JEL H25, H26, H71, L81, R51)


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