Analysis of the Relationship of Productivity between the Public Sector and the INTERSTAT
Abstract
Scientific progress embodies and depends on open communication, a common discourse that has roots in rationality, collaboration, as well as an easy and regular flow and efficient information exchange. These ideals can be considered hypocritical by elite power and can be displayed or emphasized in many other ways, but they are even involved in the idea of science, but they are based on the phenomenon called globalization and its practical outcomes. Business, banking and commerce depend on the flow of information and are facilitated by new communication technologies. The hardware of these technologies tends to be systemic and integrated - computerized, televised, cable, satellite, laser, optical fiber and microchip technology combining to create a vast network of communications and interactive information that can potentiate any people on earth have access to any other person, and each time they make each byte the availability of information for each set of eyes in search.
References
[2] Ammons, D. Productivity barriers in the public sector, L. Public Productivity Handbook, New York: Marcel Dekker. 2004.
[3] Bair, J. Global commodity chain: genealogy and review, in Bair, J. Frontiers of Commodity Chain Research. 2009: 1-34.
[4] Dawes, S.S. Conditions and measures of success in public sector knowledge networks. Proceedings of the Fourth International e-Government Conference, Copenhagen. Linz: Trauner-Verlag. 2005.
[5] Dobni, D. A marketing-relevant framework for understanding service worker productivity, Journal of Services Marketing. 2004; 18 (4): 303-317.
[6] Gereffi, G., Sturgeon, T. The governance of global value chains, Review of International Political Economy. 2005. 12: 78-104.
[7] Hubbard, T. Information, Decisions, and Productivity: On-Board Computers and Capacity Utilization in Trucking, American Economic Review. 2003; 93(4): 1328–1353.
[8] Jorgenson, D., Stiroh, K. A Retrospective Look at the U.S. Productivity Growth Resurgence, Journal of Economic Perspectives. 2008; 22(1): 3-24.
[9] Scholte, J. Globalization: A Critical Introduction. London: Macmillan. 2000.
Copyright (c) 2018 LUMEN Proceedings

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Selection and peer-review under responsibility of the Organizing Committee of the conference. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.