yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The key to growth? Race with the machines - Erik Brynjolfsson


7m read
·Nov 8, 2024

[Music] [Music]

Growth is not dead. Let's start the story 120 years ago when American factories began to electrify their operations, igniting the Second Industrial Revolution. The amazing thing is that productivity did not increase in those factories for 30 years. 30 years— that's long enough for a generation of managers to retire. You see, the first wave of managers simply replaced their steam engines with electric motors, but they didn't redesign the factories to take advantage of electricity's flexibility. It fell to the next generation to invent new work processes, and then productivity soared, often doubling or even tripling in those factories.

Electricity is an example of a general purpose technology, like the steam engine before it. General purpose technologies drive most economic growth because they unleash cascades of complementary innovations, like light bulbs. And yes, factory redesign. Is there a general purpose technology of our era? Sure, it's the computer. But technology alone is not enough; technology is not destiny. We shape our destiny. Just as the earlier generation of managers needed to redesign their factories, we're going to need to reinvent our organizations and even our whole economic system.

We're not doing as well at that job as we should be. As we'll see in a moment, productivity is actually doing all right, but it has become decoupled from jobs. The income of the typical worker is stagnating. These troubles are sometimes misdiagnosed as the end of innovation, but they are actually the growing pains of what Andrew McAfee and I call the New Machine Age.

Let's look at some data. Here's GDP per person in America. There are some bumps along the way, but the big story is you could practically fit a ruler to it. This is a log scale, so it looks like steady growth is actually an acceleration in real terms. And here's productivity. You can see a little bit of a slowdown there in the mid-70s, but it matches up pretty well with the Second Industrial Revolution when factories were learning how to electrify their operations. After a lag, productivity accelerated again. So maybe history doesn't repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes.

Today productivity is at an all-time high, and despite the Great Recession, it grew faster in the 2000s than it did in the 1990s, the roaring 1990s. And that was faster than the 70s or 80s. It's growing faster than it did during the Second Industrial Revolution. And that's just the United States. The global news is even better. Worldwide incomes have grown at a faster rate in the past decade than ever in history. If anything, all these numbers actually understate our progress because the New Machine Age is more about knowledge creation than just physical production. It's mind, not matter; brain, not brawn; ideas, not things.

That creates a problem for standard metrics because we're getting more and more stuff for free, like Wikipedia, Google, Skype, and if they post on the web even this TED Talk. Now getting stuff for free is a good thing, right? Sure, of course it is, but that's not how economists measure GDP. Zero price means zero weight in the GDP statistics. According to the numbers, the music industry is half the size that it was 10 years ago, but I'm listening to more and better music than ever. You know I bet you are too. In total, my research estimates that the GDP numbers miss over 300 billion dollars per year in free goods and services on the internet.

Now let's look to the future. There are some super smart people who are arguing that we've reached the end of growth, but to understand the future of growth, we need to make predictions about the underlying drivers of growth. I'm optimistic because the New Machine Age is digital, exponential, and combinatorial. When goods are digital, they can be replicated with perfect quality at nearly zero cost, and they can be delivered almost instantaneously. Welcome to the economics of abundance.

But there's a subtler benefit to the digitization of the world: measurement is the lifeblood of science and progress. In the age of big data, we can measure the world in ways we never could before. Secondly, the New Machine Age is exponential. Computers get better faster than anything else ever. A child's PlayStation today is more powerful than a military supercomputer from 1996. But our brains are wired for a linear world. As a result, exponential trends take us by surprise.

I used to teach my students that there are some things you know computers just aren't good at, like driving a car through traffic. That's right. Here's Andy and me grinning like mad men because we just rode down Route 101 in, yes, a driverless car. Thirdly, the New Machine Age is combinatorial. The stagnationist view is that ideas get used up like low hanging fruit, but the reality is that each innovation creates building blocks for even more innovations. Here's an example: in just a matter of a few weeks, an undergraduate student of mine built an app that ultimately reached 1.3 million users. He was able to do that so easily because he built it on top of Facebook, and Facebook was built on top of the web, and that was built on top of the internet, and so on and so forth.

Now individually, digital, exponential, and combinatorial would each be game changers. Put them together, and we're seeing a wave of astonishing breakthroughs like robots that do factory work or run as fast as a cheetah or leap tall buildings in a single bound. You know, robots are even revolutionizing cat transportation. But perhaps the most important invention, the most important invention is machine learning. Consider one project: IBM's Watson. These little dots here—those are all the champions on the quiz show Jeopardy. At first, Watson wasn't very good, but it improved at a rate faster than any human could. Shortly after, Dave Hirucci showed this chart to my class at MIT, and Watson beat the world Jeopardy champion at age seven.

Watson is still kind of in its childhood. Recently its teachers let it surf the internet unsupervised; the next day it started answering questions with profanities. Damn! But you know, Watson is growing up fast. It's being tested for jobs in call centers, and it's getting them. It's applying for legal, banking, and medical jobs and getting some of them. Isn't it ironic that at the very moment we are building intelligent machines—perhaps the most important invention in human history—some people are arguing that innovation is stagnating?

Like the first two Industrial Revolutions, the full implications of the New Machine Age are going to take at least a century to fully play out. But they are staggering. So does that mean we have nothing to worry about? No. Technology is not destiny. Productivity is at an all-time high, but fewer people now have jobs. We have created more wealth in the past decade than ever, but for a majority of Americans, their income has fallen. This is the great decoupling of productivity from employment and of wealth from work. You know, it's not surprising that millions of people have become disillusioned by the great decoupling. But like too many others, they misunderstand its basic causes.

Technology is racing ahead, but it's leaving more and more people behind. Today we can take a routine job, codify it in a set of machine-readable instructions, and then replicate it a million times. You know, I recently overheard a conversation that epitomizes these new economics. This guy says, "Nah, I don't use H&R Block anymore. TurboTax does everything that my tax preparer did, but it's faster, cheaper, and more accurate. How can a skilled worker compete with a $39 piece of software?" She can't. Today, millions of Americans do have faster, cheaper, more accurate tax preparation, and the founders of Intuit have done very well for themselves. But 17 percent of tax preparers no longer have jobs. That is a microcosm of what's happening, not just in software and services, but in media and music, in finance and manufacturing, in retailing and trade—in short, in every industry, people are racing against the machine, and many of them are losing that race.

What can we do to create shared prosperity? The answer is not to try to slow down technology. Instead of racing against the machine, we need to learn to race with the machine. That is our grand challenge. The New Machine Age can be dated to a day 15 years ago when Gary Kasparov, the world chess champion, played Deep Blue, a supercomputer. The machine won that day, and today a chess program running on a cell phone can beat a human grandmaster. It got so bad that when he was asked what strategy he would use against a computer, Jan Donner, the Dutch grandmaster, replied, "I'd bring a hammer."

But today a computer is no longer the world chess champion; neither is a human. Because Kasparov organized a freestyle tournament where teams of humans and computers could work together, and the winning team had no grandmaster and it had no supercomputer. What they had was better teamwork, and they showed that a team of humans and computers working together could beat any computer or any human working alone. Racing with the machine beats racing against the machine. Technology is not destiny. We shape our destiny. Thank you.

[Music]

More Articles

View All
America’s prison catastrophe: Can we undo it? | Damien Echols & more | Big Think
Prisons in America, specifically, are some of the biggest, most dysfunctional businesses. For an advanced society, the conditions in our prisons are quite appalling. And the worst parts to deal with were just the sheer brutality of it. People who have mad…
Newton's third law | Physics | Khan Academy
Earth puts a force on an apple making it fall down. But the question is, does the apple put a force on the Earth as well? And if it does, is that force bigger, smaller, or the same? That’s what we want to find out in this video. Now, to try and answer th…
Adding Motion blur to 3D objects
Hey guys, this is Mac Heads 101 with another special guest to show you how to um give a motion blur to a 3D rotating object in After Effects. Limited for making us that awesome intro, go check him out! He has lots of unboxing videos, reviews, tutorials, …
Worked example: Motion problems with derivatives | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
A particle moves along the x-axis. The function x of t gives the particle’s position at any time t is greater than or equal to zero, and they give us x of t right over here. What is the particle’s velocity v of t at t is equal to 2? So, pause this video,…
12 Public Lectures: Psychological Significance of the Biblical Stories
The Bible is a series of books written, edited, and assembled over thousands of years. It contains the most influential stories of mankind. Knowledge of these stories is essential to a deep understanding of western culture, which is in turn vital to prope…
Bill Ackman: How to Get RICH During Inflation (RARE New Interview)
Again, my view is inflation, or kind of the house view, is inflation is going to be persistently higher. That can happen in the very short term, like literally weeks. I think the structural forces have changed. Billionaire investor Bill Amman just issued …