NAB
The internet economy grew seven times faster than the total
U.S. economy during the past four years, with millions of jobs generated by if
not dependent on, connections to the Web.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/why-and-how-the-internet-is-the-engine-of-economic-growth/
The study, commissioned by the Interactive Advertising
Bureau (IAB), found the internet economy’s contribution to U.S. GDP grew 22
percent a year since 2016, in a national economy that grows between two to
three percent per year.
In 2020 alone, it contributed $2.45 trillion to the US’
$21.18 trillion GDP.
“It’s clear that the U.S. economy is undergoing a radical
transformation driven by the market-making power of the internet,” said David
Cohen, CEO, IAB. “It’s now possible for a business located anywhere in the U.S.
to reach a global market. As regulators continue to examine online and
digital data policies, they must understand how the internet powers economic
growth and how proposed regulations could slow or even stop that growth.”
The study, ‘The Economic Impact of the Market-Making
Internet – Advertising, Content, Commerce, and Innovation: Contribution to U.S.
Employment and GDP,’ also discovered that the internet generated 17.6 million
direct and indirect jobs in the period, marking “a dramatic increase” compared
with just three million jobs when IAB began measuring employment growth in
2008.
Specifically, the research estimated that 850,000 people are
self-employed and 450,000 work for small businesses in jobs that could not exist
without the internet.
The study also showed that the commercial internet directly
generated seven million jobs and indirectly provided jobs to another 10.65
million people fulfilling service needs created by internet-based companies.
There are 200,000 full-time equivalent jobs in the online
creator economy. This number is just short of the combined memberships of
craft and labor unions SAG-AFTRA (160,000), the American Federation of
Musicians (80,000), the Writer’s Guild (24,000), and the Authors Guild (9,000).
“Not only large firms, but also large numbers of small firms
and individuals, now have the platforms and tools to find customers, engage
with them, and transact,” said John Deighton, a Professor of Business
Administration Emeritus at Harvard Business School who led the research. “And founders don’t need to bring large
amounts of capital to the table. Investors have shown great willingness to
supply the capital, confident that advertising, sale of subscriptions and
licenses, and freemium options will get them an attractive return on their
investment.”
Since IAB began measuring the economic impact of the
internet in 2008, the internet’s contribution to GDP has grown eightfold, from
$300 billion to $2.45 trillion.
It would be unsurprising if the impact of the internet on GDP were not replicated in other major economies around the world.
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