Abstract

The Internet has completely transformed our lives on an individual basis in many ways, ranging from the way we communicate through the way we socialize to the way we shop and travel. Businesses are no exception to this premise. This paper studies the adoption of the Internet by female-owned firms in India. It uses the World Bank’s Enterprise Surveys Program data set for the year 2014 to study the adoption of the Internet by more than 10,000 firms in the country. After controlling for a large number of firm-level characteristics, empirical results obtained indicate that female-owned firms are more likely to use the Internet than their male counterparts. However, further empirical analysis shows that more intensive adoption of the Internet by these female-owned firms does not necessarily translate into better performance. Specifically, the adoption of the Internet does not make female-owned firms more or less likely to have better productivity and sales growth in contrast to that of their male counterparts.

Highlights

  • Telecom services in general and broadband Internet services in particular have changed our lives in many ways, ranging from the way we communicate, socialize, plan vacations, and do our shopping

  • The paper found out that female-owned firms in the country were more likely to use the Internet than their male counterparts

  • The paper analyzed whether the adoption of the Internet by firms owned/managed by females in India led to better performance

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Telecom services in general and broadband Internet services in particular have changed our lives in many ways, ranging from the way we communicate, socialize, plan vacations, and do our shopping. 156 / Use of the Internet and its Impact on Productivity and Sales Growth in Female-Owned Firms: Evidence from India as general-purpose technologies for a variety of additional reasons. This paper analyzes the adoption of Internet services by female-owned firms, vis-à-vis their male counterparts in India. For this analysis, the paper uses an extensive firm-level data set (10,000 plus observations) from the World Bank’s Enterprise Surveys for the year 2014 (The World Bank, 2014). In the US, where the Internet penetration rate is 92 percent, the digital-social-media giant Facebook maintains records of likeand-dislike posts of its users related to various products Facebook shares this data with its business customers. Journal of Entrepreneurship, Management and Innovation (JEMI), Volume 13, Issue 2, 2017: 155-178

LITERATURE REVIEW
RESEARCH METHODS
Findings
CONCLUSION
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