Facebook
report says it adds more than $200 billion to global
economy
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[January 20, 2015]
By Alexei Oreskovic
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - With 1.35 billion
users of its Internet social network, Facebook Inc would rank as the
world’s second-most populous nation if it were a country.
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While its users may populate only a virtual country, Facebook says
it generates a lot of real economic activity – $227 billion worth of
economic impact and 4.5 million jobs in 2014, according to a new
study by consulting firm Deloitte & Touche [DLTE.UL] that Facebook
commissioned.
The report looks at the businesses that maintain pages on Facebook
as well as the mobile apps and games that consumers play on Facebook
and measures all the economic activity that result. It also
considers the demand for gadgets and online connectivity services
that are generated by Facebook.
When a company advertises to customers on Facebook, for example,
some of the resulting sales can be directly attributed to Facebook.
When consumers donated $100 million for research into amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis during this summer’s Ice Bucket challenge,
Facebook’s auto-play video ads were a key factor.
“People believe that technology creates jobs in the tech sector and
destroys jobs everywhere else,” Facebook Chief Operating Officer
Sheryl Sandberg told Reuters in an interview on Friday. “This report
shows that’s not true.”
According to Sandberg, Facebook is helping create a new wave of
small businesses in everything from fashion to fitness. She cited a
group of young women in Bengaluru, India, who started a hair
accessory business using Facebook and a mother in North Carolina who
started the Lolly Wolly Doodle line of clothing, selling to
customers through Facebook.
The report comes as many established industries are critical of Web
startups such as ride-sharing service Uber and home-sharing service
Airbnb. Critics contend that the services circumvent regulations and
threaten established taxis and hotel businesses.
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The report’s data will provide Sandberg with something to talk about
when she travels to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
this week. On Thursday, Sandberg will be on a panel alongside Google
Inc Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and Microsoft Corp Chief
Executive Satya Nadella about the future of the digital economy.
“We’re no longer in a place where large companies can create the
jobs the world needs,” Sandberg said.
(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Ken Wills)
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