Nice bit of optimistic futurism. I think he's right about where we will end up, 
though God only knows how much pain we will go through before we get there. 



The Technium: The Post-Productive Economy
http://www.kk.org/thetechnium/archives/2013/01/the_post-produc.php

Take a look at these farm houses which I saw under construction in remote areas 
of Yunnan province China. They were not unusual; farmsteads this size were 
everywhere in rural China. Note the scale of these massive buildings. Each 
support post is cut from a single huge tree. The massive earth walls are three 
stories high and taper toward the top. They are homes for a single extended 
family built in the traditional Tibetan farmhouse style. They are larger than 
most middle-class American homes. The extensive wood carvings inside and 
outside will be painted in garish colors, like this family room shown in a 
finished home. This area of Yunnan is consider one of the poorer areas in 
China, and the standard of living of the inhabitants here would be classified 
as “poor.”

Part of the reason is that these homes have no running water, no grid 
electricity, and no toilets. They don’t even have outhouses.

But the farmers and their children who live in these homes all have cell 
phones, and they have accounts on the Chinese versions of Twitter and Facebook, 
and recharge via solar panels.

This is important because a recent thought-provoking article by a renowned 
economist argues that the US economy has not been growing during the internet 
boom and probably will not grow any more than it has already because computers 
and the internet are not as productive as the last two industrial revolutions.





You can read the article here: Is U.S. Economic Growth Over? (PDF) by Robert 
Gordon.

Gordon answers his own question with: Yes, US economic growth is over for a 
while. I think Robert Gordon is wrong about his conclusion, but I wanted to 
start with one of the bits of evidence he offers for his view. He is trying to 
argue that the consequences of the 2nd Industrial Revolution, which bought to 
common people electricity and plumbing, was far more important than the 
computers and internet which the 3rd Industrial Revolution has brought us. 
(Gordon’s 1st Industrial revolution was steam and railroads.) As evidence of 
this claim he offers this hypothetical choice between option A and option B.

With option A you are allowed to keep 2002 electronic technology, including 
your Windows 98 laptop accessing Amazon, and you can keep running water and 
indoor toilets; but you can’t use anything invented since 2002. Option B is 
that you get everything invented in the past decade right up to Facebook, 
Twitter, and the iPad, but you have to give up running water and indoor 
toilets. You have to haul the water into your dwelling and carry out the waste. 
Even at 3am on a rainy night, your only toilet option is a wet and perhaps 
muddy walk to the outhouse. Which option do you choose?
Gordon then goes on to say:

I have posed this imaginary choice to several audiences in speeches, and the 
usual reaction is a guffaw, a chuckle, because the preference for Option A is 
so obvious.
But as I just recounted, Option A is not obvious at all.

The farmers in rural China have chosen cell phones and twitter over toilets and 
running water. To them, this is not a hypothetical choice at all, but a real 
one. and they have made their decision in massive numbers. Tens of millions, 
maybe hundreds of millions, if not billions of people in the rest of Asia, 
Africa and South America have chosen Option B. You can go to almost any African 
village to see this. And it is not because they are too poor to afford a 
toilet. As you can see from these farmers’ homes in Yunnan, they definitely 
could have at least built an outhouse if they found it valuable. (I know they 
don’t have a toilet because I’ve stayed in many of their homes.) But instead 
they found the intangible benefits of connection to be greater than the 
physical comforts of running water.

Most of the poor of the world don’t have such access to resources as these 
Yunnan farmers, but even in their poorer environment they still choose to use 
their meager cash to purchase the benefits of the 3rd revolution over the 
benefits of the 2nd revolution. Connection before plumbing. It is an almost 
universal choice.

This choice may seem difficult for someone who has little experience in the 
developing world, but in the places were most of the world lives we can plainly 
see that the fruits of the 3rd generation of automation are at least as, and 
perhaps more, valuable than some fruits of the 2nd wave of industrialization.

So if people value the benefits of computers and internet so much why don’t we 
see this value reflected in the growth of the US economy? According to Gordon 
growth has stalled in the internet age. This question was first asked by Robert 
Solow in 1987 and Gordon’s answer is that there are 6 “headwinds,” six 
negative, or contrary forces which deduct growth from the growth due to 
technology in the US (Gordon reiterates he is only speaking of he US). The six 
“headwinds” slowing down growth are the aging of the US population, stagnant 
levels of education, rising inequality, outsourcing and globalization, 
environmental constraints, and household and government debt. I agree with 
Gordon about these headwinds, particularly the first one, which he also sees as 
the most important.

Where Gordon is wrong is his misunderstanding and underestimating of the power 
of technological growth before it meets these headwinds.

First, as mentioned above, he underestimates the value of the innovations that 
the internet has brought us. They seem trivial compared to running water and 
electric lights, but in fact, as billions around the world show us, they are 
just as valuable.

So back to Solow; if digital innovations, millions of apps, the vast social 
networks that are being woven are increasing our living standards where is the 
evidence in the GDP?

I think the key sentence in Gordon’s paper is this:

“Both the first two revolutions required about 100 years for their full effects 
to percolate through the economy.”
Repeat: it took a century for the full benefits of the innovations to show up.

By my calculation we are into year 20 of this 3rd upheaval. Gordon wants to 
start the clock on the 3rd Industrial Revolution in 1960 at the start of 
commercial computers. That’s an arbitrary starting point; I would arbitrarily 
start it at the dawn of the commercial internet because I don’t think 
unconnected computers by themselves are revolutionary. Unconnected computers 
did not change much. Standalone personal computers hardly changed our lives at 
all. They sped up typing, altered publishing, and changed spreadsheet modeling 
forever, but these were minor blips in the economy and well-being of most 
people. Big mainframe computers helped the largest corporations manage 
financial assets or logistics, but a number of studies have shown that they did 
not elevate much growth.

Everything changed, however, when computers married the telephone. This is when 
ordinary people noticed computers. They could get online. Everything went 
online. Retail changed, production changed, occupations changed. This 
communication revolution accelerated change elsewhere. Processes and gizmos got 
smarter because they were connected. Now the advantages of personal computers 
made sense because in fact they were just local terminals in something bigger: 
the network. As the Sun Computer company famously put it: the network is the 
computer.

So the 3rd Industrial Revolution is not really computers and the internet, it 
is the networking of everything.
And in that regime we are just at the beginning of the beginning. We have only 
begun to connect everything to everything and to make little network minds 
everywhere. It may take another 80 years for the full affect of this revolution 
to be revealed.

In the year 2095 when economic grad students are asked to review this paper of 
Robert Gordon and write about why he was wrong back in 2012, they will say 
things like “Gordon missed the impact from the real inventions of this 
revolution: big data, ubiquitous mobile, quantified self, cheap AI, and 
personal work robots. All of these were far more consequential than stand alone 
computation, and yet all of them were embryonic and visible when he wrote his 
paper. He was looking backwards instead of forward.”

Finally, Gordon is focused, as most economists, on GDP which measures the 
amount of “labor saving” that has been accomplished. The more labor you save 
while making or serving something, the more productive you are. In the calculus 
of traditional economics productivity equals wealth. Gordon rightly points out 
that so far the internet has not saved a lot of labor. As I argue in my robot 
piece in Wired, Better Than Human (not my title), I think the real wealth in 
the future does not come from saving labor but in creating new kinds of things 
to do. In this sense long-term wealth depends on making new labor.

Civilization is not just about saving labor but also about “wasting” labor to 
make art, to make beautiful things, to “waste” time playing, like sports. 
Nobody ever suggested that Picasso should spend fewer hours painting per 
picture in order to boost his wealth or improve the economy. The value he added 
to the economy could not be optimized for productivity. It’s hard to shoehorn 
some of the most important things we do in life into the category of “being 
productive.” Generally any task that can be measured by the metrics of 
productivity — output per hour — is a task we want automation to do. In short, 
productivity is for robots. Humans excel at wasting time, experimenting, 
playing, creating, and exploring. None of these fare well under the scrutiny of 
productivity. That is why science and art are so hard to fund. But they are 
also the foundation of long-term growth. Yet our notions of jobs, of work, of 
the economy don’t include a lot of space for wasting time, experimenting, 
playing, creating, and exploring.

Long-term growth of that type that Robert Gordon studies is really weird if you 
think about it. As he notes, there wasn’t much of it in the world before 1750, 
before technological progress. Now several centuries later we have a thousand 
times as much wealth as before. Where does this extra good stuff come from? It 
is not moved from somewhere else, or borrowed. It is self-created. There’s a 
system which manufactures this wealth “out of nothing.” Much like life itself. 
There are certainly necessary conditions and ingredients, but it seems once you 
have those in place, the economy (the system) will self-generate this wealth.

A number of economists have wrestled with the origins of this self-generating 
wealth. Paul Romer and Brian Arthur both separately point to the recombining 
and re-mixing of existing ideas as the way economic growth occurs. This view 
focuses on knowledge as the prime motor in a self-renewing circle of increasing 
returns. Unlike say energy or matter, the more knowledge you spend, the more 
knowledge you earn, and the more breeds more in a never-ending virtuous spiral.

What is important is that this self-increasing cycle makes things that are new. 
New goods, new services, new dreams, new ambitions, even new needs. When things 
are new they are often not easy to measure, not easy to detect, nor easy to 
optimize. The 1st Industrial Revolution that introduced steam and railways also 
introduced new ideas about ownership, identity, privacy, and literacy. These 
ideas were not “productive” at first, but over time as they seeped into law, 
and culture, and became embedded into other existing technologies, they helped 
work to become more productive. For example ideas of ownership and capital 
became refined and unleashed new arrangements for funding large-scale projects 
in more efficient ways. In some cases these indirect ideas may have more 
long-term affect on growth than the immediate inventions of the time.

Likewise the grand shift our society is undergoing now, moving to a highly 
networked world in the third phase of industrialization, is producing many 
innovations that 1) are hard to perceive, 2) not really about optimizing labor, 
and 3) therefore hard to quantify in terms of productivity.

One has the sense that if we wait a while, the new things will trickled down 
and find places in the machinery of commerce where they can eventually boost 
the efficiency of work.

But it seems to me that there is second-order tilt in this shift to a networked 
world that says the real wealth in the long-term, or perhaps that should be the 
new wealth, will not be found merely in greater productivity, but in greater 
degrees of playing, creating, and exploring. We don’t have good metrics for new 
possibilities, for things that have never been seen before, because by 
definition, their boundaries, distinctions, and units are unknown. How does one 
measure “authenticity” or “hyperreality” or “stickiness”?

Productivity is the main accomplishment, and metric, of the two previous 
Industrial Revolutions. Productivity won’t go away; over the long term it will 
take fewer hours of human work to produce more of the goods and services those 
economies produce. Our system will do this primarily because most of this work 
will be done by bots.

The main accomplishment of this 3rd Industrialization, the networking of our 
brains, other brains and other things, is to add something onto the substrate 
of productivity. Call it consumptity, or generativity. By whatever name we 
settle on, this frontier expands the creative aspect of the whole system, 
increasing innovations, expanding possibilities, encouraging the inefficiencies 
of experiment and exploring, absorbing more of the qualities of play. We don’t 
have good measurements of these yet. Cynics will regard this as new age 
naiveté, or unadorned utopianism, or a blindness to the “realities” of real 
life of greedy corporations, or bad bosses, or the inevitable suffering of real 
work. It’s not.

The are two senses of growth: scale, that is, more, bigger, faster; and 
evolution. The linear progression of steam power, railways, electrification, 
and now computers and the internet is a type of the former; just more of the 
same, but only better. Therefore the productivity growth curve should continue 
up in a continuous linear fashion.

I suggest the growth of this 3rd regime is more like evolutionary growth, 
rather than developmental growth. The apparent stagnation we see in 
productivity, in real wages, in debt relief, is because we don’t reckon, and 
don’t perceive, the new directions of growth. It is not more of the same, but 
different.

Say we are watching an organism evolve. It might over time become extremely 
efficient in its energy use. Or it might become very large, cleverly optimizing 
its metabolic rate to manage its new girth. In either case, if we were 
biological economists watching it we would declare the organism to have grown 
in productivity.

But we can also imagine many other ways this organism might grow or evolve 
while keeping its metabolism steady. It could start complexifying, becoming 
multicellular. It might develop new sensors increasing its range of 
interaction. It might sift its reproductive strategy from making only one 
offspring garnering much attention, to making thousands of them with less care. 
It might evolve a tail and change its mode of locomotion entirely — all the 
time leaving its metabolism rate unaltered.

Our economy is moving into the latter mode of growth — an evolutionary uplift, 
which may or may not show an increase in productivity, particularly at the 
start of this phase. We see hints of this evolutionary growth already. The US 
economy shows:

Increased complexity — Derivatives, derivatives of the derivatives, flash 
crowds, dark pools of money, there are hundreds of new instruments and states 
of money.
Increased interdependency — National economies, particularly the US, are not 
longer independent cells, but part of a multi-organel system.

Increasing ubiquity of finance and monetization — More of our lives, from games 
to socializing to cooking to child caring, are now part of the greater economy.

Decreasing emphasis on ownership — In the parts of the economy run on 
information, data, and knowledge, these key ingredients can be used without 
owning them, and in fact often are more valuable when not “owned.”

There are many more, but these few demonstrate the way the economy is shifting 
rather than simply accelerating (although it is doing that too).

Technology will continue to increase productivity for the commodities of life, 
even if it takes another 80 years. But the next phase we are rushing into — the 
3rd Industrial Revolution, the world of networks — the non-commodities of life 
will play a greater role in economic terms. When science fiction author Neal 
Stephenson laments: “I saw the best minds of my generation… writing spam 
filters” he should not give up. It’s not that different that the best minds of 
a former generation designing oil filters. These are the unglamorous but 
essential tasks in constructing a whole new infrastructure.

In his paper Robert Gordon talks about the huge value gained from “one-time” 
events, such as the one-time (first and last) move of a large proportion of 
women into the workforce. This new gain happens only once (assuming they 
remain). In this computer-internet economy we are experiencing a one-time gain 
from a huge one-time event. This is the first and only time a planet will get 
wired up into a global network. We are alive at this critical moment in 
history, and we are just at the beginning of the beginning of the many 
developments that will erupt because of this shift.

Happy new economy!

(via Instapaper)



Sent from my iPhone

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