Browse

You are looking at 1 - 1 of 1 items for :

  • Type: Journal Issue x
  • Cloud Computing x
  • Cloud computing x
  • Measurement and Data on National Income and Product Accounts and Wealth; Environmental Accounts x
  • International trade x
  • Revenue administration x
  • Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics x
  • Public Finance x
  • International economics x
  • Business and Economics x
  • Industries; Land Use; Labor x
  • Western Hemisphere x
Clear All Modify Search
Mr. Andrew Baer, Mr. Kwangwon Lee, and James Tebrake
Digitalization and the innovative use of digital technologies is changing the way we work, learn, communicate, buy and sell products. One emerging digital technology of growing importance is cloud computing. More and more businesses, governments and households are purchasing hardware and software services from a small number of large cloud computing providers. This change is having an impact on how macroeconomic data are compiled and how they are interpreted by users. Specifically, this is changing the information and communication technology (ICT) investment pattern from one where ICT investment was diversified across many industries to a more concentrated investment pattern. Additionally, this is having an impact on cross-border flows of commercial services since the cloud service provider does not need to be located in the same economic territory as the purchaser of cloud services. This paper will outline some of the methodological and compilation challenges facing statisticians and analysts, provide some tools that can be used to overcome these challenges and highlight some of the implications these changes are having on the way users of national accounts data look at investment and trade in commercial services.