A great manifesto for the future. Now if only we could build a party around 
this...



Technology and business as if people matter
https://www.oreilly.com/ideas/technology-and-business-as-if-people-matter
(via Instapaper)


Tim O'Reilly on stage at Next:Economy 2015. (source: O'Reilly Conferences via 
Flickr).
Register for the Next:Economy Summit, Oct. 10-11 in San Francisco. This will be 
the definitive forum on the shape of the next economy. Be part of the 
discussion and understand how the technological revolution will shape the 
future of work and business.

It was 1930, at the start of the Great Depression, when famed economist John 
Maynard Keynes wrote the following words, in the same prescient essay where he 
coined the term “technological unemployment":

“We are suffering just now from a bad attack of economic pessimism. It is 
common to hear people say that the epoch of enormous economic progress which 
characterised the nineteenth century is over; that the rapid improvement in the 
standard of life is now going to slow down; that a decline in prosperity is 
more likely than an improvement in the decade which lies ahead of us. I believe 
that this is a wildly mistaken interpretation of what is happening to us. We 
are suffering, not from the rheumatics of old age, but from the growing-pains 
of over-rapid changes, from the painfulness of readjustment between one 
economic period and another….”

The essay was called “Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren.”

Keynes was right, and he was wrong. Sure enough, after a punishing depression 
and a great World War, the economy entered a period of unparalleled prosperity. 
But in recent decades, despite all the remarkable progress of business and 
technology, that prosperity has been unevenly distributed.

Around the world, the average standard of living has increased enormously, but 
in modern developed economies, the middle class has stagnated, and for the 
first time in generations, our children may be worse off than we are. Once 
again, we face what Keynes called “the enormous anomaly of unemployment in a 
world full of wants,” with consequent political instability and uncertain 
business prospects.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

Last year, I launched a new event called The Next:Economy Summit, which aims to 
help businesses, policy makers, and technologists understand where the economy 
went wrong and to chart a course from the WTF economy we experience today, full 
of wonders and horrors in equal measure, to a Next Economy that brings greater 
prosperity to all.

I'm now planning the second annual Next:Economy Summit, which this year I'll be 
co-hosting with LinkedIn co-founder and executive chairman Reid Hoffman. Here 
are some things I've been thinking about and will be exploring further at the 
Summit this year:

In the Next Economy, entrepreneurs tackle the world’s hardest problems - before 
they tackle us!  There are those who worry that as more and more jobs are done 
by machines, there will be nothing left for humans to do. Yet in the 21st 
century, we face enormous challenges: climate change, refugees displaced by war 
and economic inequality, aging populations supported by fewer young workers, 
new infectious diseases, crumbling 20th century infrastructure, and more. In 
the past, machinery augmented human labor, making things that were once 
impossible the stuff of everyday life. We tunneled through mountains and under 
the sea, brought electricity, plumbing, and instantaneous communications even 
to remote locations. We have to stop worrying about "jobs" and start focusing 
on how to use the current generation of technology to enable people to do 
things that were unthinkable in the 20th century. As Nick Hanauer has said, 
"Technology is the accumulation of solutions to human problems. We won't run 
out of jobs till we run out of problems." I want to showcase entrepreneurs who 
are making a difference, not just making a dollar.
In the Next Economy, creativity—not just efficiency—is the key to competitive 
advantage. Even in a world where machines do many tasks that humans do today, 
the Next Economy will pay for what is uniquely human. We all crave the human 
touch, and caring and creativity will be keys to success. People at all levels 
of society pay a premium over the base cost of goods as a way of expressing and 
experiencing beauty, status, belonging, and identity. And in our most vibrant 
cities, a privileged class experiences a taste of a future that could be the 
future for everyone. Restaurants compete on the basis of creativity and 
service, "everyone’s private driver" whisks people around in comfort from 
experience to experience, and one-of-a-kind boutiques provide unique consumer 
goods.
In the Next Economy, companies use technology not to replace workers but to 
augment them, so that they can do things that were previously impossible. Uber 
and Lyft drivers can find passengers on demand at any point in the crowded city 
because they have been "upskilled" by the sensors in their phones and modern 
smartphone mapping technology. Surgeons partnered with robots routinely perform 
surgeries that were previously difficult or even impossible. Software robots 
can sift through mountains of documents no human could read to find the nugget 
of knowledge that makes all the difference.
In the Next Economy, companies create great experiences not just for their 
customers but also for their workers. What's more, businesses recognize that if 
workers aren’t well paid, they can’t afford to be customers, and that it’s 
simple self-interest to have a fairer distribution of the fruits of 
productivity. Even with all the controversies about the labor practices of 
Uber, Amazon, and the "gig-economy" as a whole, I believe that we are still in 
the early stages of the game, and that over time, creating great places to work 
will be a locus of competitive advantage.
In the Next Economy, AI and robots take over more and more repetitive tasks, 
and people work at jobs that our grandfathers and grandmothers would not 
recognize as work. When Hal Varian, Google's chief economist, made that remark, 
he was thinking about his own job. But how about some other jobs that didn't 
exist even a few years ago? Data scientist, user experience designer, site 
reliability engineer, social media entertainer, AI trainer... Humans will be 
working alongside bots, partnering with them, managing them - and sometimes, 
being managed by them.
In the Next Economy, new kinds of technology platforms become the 
infrastructure of prosperity in much the same way that roads, electricity, and 
telephony did in the 20th century, enabling entrepreneurs at all levels of 
society. I'm not just talking about universal fiber, but about on-demand 
logistics, real time skill-matching platforms, online education, peer-to-peer 
media platforms (aka social media), real-time translation, new mechanisms for 
financial exchange, assistive AI, self-driving cars, drones, and other forms of 
universal robotics.
In the Next Economy, there are new ways of paying and being paid. And I'm not 
just talking about Bitcoin! For so long, we've taken advertising for granted as 
the primary currency of online media, but there are intriguing new models 
emerging, from patronage through implicit "reputation currencies."
In the Next Economy, individuals cooperate across the boundaries of companies 
and countries. I'm asking myself how new networking technologies change the 
fundamental nature of management and corporate structure.
In the Next Economy, policy makers don’t just stick to old recipes for managing 
the economy and providing a social safety net, but try bold new experiments 
informed by data and reflecting the reality of how people live today. Universal 
Basic Income. How might that work? Portable benefits? Makes sense in a world of 
"continuous partial employment." Drones? We'd better rethink our use of 
airspace! How do we regulate on demand transportation, homes turned into 
occasional hotels, and a future of self-driving cars? We are looking to convene 
a robust conversation about the legitimate public policy objectives of 
technology regulation, as well as how to make regulation more data driven and 
responsive to fast changing conditions.
In the Next Economy, companies recognize that “we all do better when we ALL do 
better.” “Public benefit” is not a special class of company but the common 
sense of how to do business. We've realized that our financial markets 
increasingly reward short-term thinking and that the idea that the only 
obligation of a corporation is to enrich its shareholders has made some of us 
very rich, but has made our society as a whole more fragile and our economy 
less productive.
Technology can make everyone richer. And it is only when everyone is richer, 
not just a few, that an economy truly thrives. It is our opportunity - not just 
our responsibility - to make the economy enjoyed by the rich into the economy 
for everyone - the Next Economy!



We’re assembling a remarkable cast of leaders—entrepreneurs, business and labor 
leaders, thinkers and policy makers, and hands-on workers—to help us think 
through the challenges and opportunities of the Next Economy.

If your startup is about augmenting humans so that they can do the impossible, 
creating amazing experiences for people, solving the world's hardest problems, 
enriching not just yourself but everyone around you, you are part of the Next 
Economy. I want to hear from you.

I hope to see you at the event. I'll also be publishing many more pieces on the 
subject of technology and the future of work on LinkedIn, using the hashtag 
#NextEconomy.

We also publish related links via @oreillynext on Twitter. You can also 
subscribe to our weekly Next:Economy newsletter, and send us stories that we 
ought to know about via Next:[email protected]. It provides a wealth of 
further reading from the community of folks who are wrestling with questions of 
technology and the future of work.

Article image: Tim O'Reilly on stage at Next:Economy 2015. (source: O'Reilly 
Conferences via Flickr).


Sent from my iPhone

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