Author Archive

ISIC

February 10, 2016

Studying the evolution of telemedicine in Canada means working within the constraints of existing economic classifications, often pushing them in directions their designers probably never intended. ISIC 8621, which covers general medical practice activities, was not devised with digital health in mind, yet it provides the best entry point for tracking organizational change tied to […]

ISIC

December 5, 2015

Tracing the contours of nanotechnology research and development in 2006 is a task that highlights both the promise and the ambiguity of classification systems. ISIC 7210, which covers research and development in natural sciences and engineering, offers a natural starting point. Yet it is a category capacious enough to house everything from biotechnology to climate […]

ISIC

October 25, 2015

The landscape of technology in 2006 now seems impossibly quaint. Smartphones were on the cusp of something transformative, but not yet ubiquitous. The word “app,” as a distinct product category, had only just started to slip into mainstream use. For economists or statisticians interested in tracking this early moment—when mobile app studios began to emerge, […]

ISIC

September 10, 2015

There’s a certain difficulty, almost a stubbornness, in tracing the early days of wind turbine manufacturing—especially when relying on legacy classification systems. ISIC 2825, the “Manufacture of machinery for mining, quarrying and construction,” is a category that seems, at first, curiously removed from the image of sleek wind farms across Northern Europe. Yet in 2005, […]

ISIC

July 30, 2015

Comparing the trajectory of thermal and renewable power capacity in 2004 feels a bit like squinting through a dusty window at a landscape in transition. The numbers are there, mostly, but they don’t always clarify as much as one hopes. ISIC 3510—Electric power generation, transmission and distribution—holds both stories, the legacy of coal-fired giants and […]

ISIC

June 15, 2015

When tracing the emergence of remote health monitoring technologies in 2003, it becomes clear that the very language of the sector was still in flux. The terminology we use today—digital health, telemonitoring, connected devices—simply didn’t have widespread currency yet. ISIC 8621, the code for general medical practice activities, is the best statistical foothold available, but […]

ISIC

May 1, 2015

The early 2000s mark a period of sometimes breathless commentary about India’s place in the global software industry. “Offshoring” had become a watchword, an emblem of shifting economic gravity, and an object of anxiety and ambition in equal measure. But for those hoping to measure the actual contours of the boom, the statistics present as […]

ISIC

March 20, 2015

If there’s a throughline in the story of ecommerce, it is how rapidly the landscape outpaced the statistical categories meant to capture it. In 2002, “online marketplace” was a concept familiar only to a small segment of the public, but to those tracking economic activity, the signs were there—hidden, perhaps, but real. ISIC 6311, “Data […]

ISIC

February 10, 2015

Hydropower in Norway is sometimes spoken of as both legacy and future—a backbone for national energy security and, increasingly, an anchor in the country’s renewable portfolio. For those wishing to measure or map the sector’s shape in 2002, ISIC 3510—electric power generation, transmission, and distribution—serves as the statistical portal. As with most industrial codes, the […]

ISIC

December 5, 2014

Tracing the evolution of genetic research at the start of the 21st century is a task that sometimes feels as intricate as the science itself. In 2001, much of the excitement around the completion of the Human Genome Project was matched by uncertainty over how genetic engineering would unfold commercially and institutionally. For those looking […]

ISIC

October 25, 2014

Looking back at Silicon Valley in 2001, it’s hard to avoid a sense of contradiction. The dot-com bubble had burst, but the ecosystem itself was, if anything, accelerating. While many high-profile failures grabbed headlines, an undercurrent of new startups persisted—some on borrowed time, others already laying the groundwork for the internet’s next phase. For economists […]

ISIC

September 10, 2014

Tracking the first major expansion of digital advertising agencies is an exercise in both clarity and frustration. The year 2000 stands out as a curious milestone—far enough into the internet era that “online advertising” had become a recognizable industry, but still early enough that definitions were fluid, and the numbers rarely aligned as one might […]

ISIC

July 30, 2014

The turn of the millennium was an inflection point for renewable energy—geothermal in particular. Assessing the scale and spread of geothermal expansion around 2000, though, is not just a question of output totals or new plant announcements. The underlying data, drawn from ISIC 3510—electric power generation, transmission, and distribution—offers both opportunity and complication. Within this […]

ISIC

June 14, 2014

By the year 2000, the word “biotechnology” had started to acquire a new weight in economic and policy circles. The Human Genome Project was cresting toward its completion, and suddenly there was a sense—sometimes anxious, sometimes breathless—that the future would be written in genes and proteins as much as in silicon. For anyone trying to […]

ISIC

May 1, 2014

If you asked most economists or policymakers at the end of the 1990s what would transform national economies next, the conversation would have circled inevitably to telecommunications. Deregulation—so often debated, often contentious—had swept through much of Europe, Asia, and the Americas by 1999, upending the old model of state-run monopolies. For those tasked with measuring […]

ISIC

March 20, 2014

In 1999, the idea of buying books, shoes, or even groceries online still struck many as either wildly futuristic or quietly risky. Yet the undercurrent of commercial innovation was unmistakable. For economists or statisticians hoping to track the expansion of early ecommerce platforms, the search starts with an imperfect tool: ISIC 6201—computer programming activities. In […]