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The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution...

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The IT Revolution and The New Economy
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Page 1: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

The IT Revolution

and

The New Economy

Page 2: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

ObjectivesTo understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares to previous economic revolutions. 3. Whether the productivity and GDP growth rates of the past decade are telling us about the IT revolution. 4. What economists think it reasonable to expect from IT in the future.

Page 3: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Outline

1. Learning from history.2. Productivity and IT in principle.

3. Economic data since 1991, what do they mean?4. What can we say about the future?

Page 4: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Three events in history are in different ways especially relevant to our discussion of the current IT revolution.

1. The Industrial Revolution.

2. The invention of the telephone.

3. The invention and distribution of electricity and electric motors and lights.

Page 5: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

What caused the Industrial Revolution?

1. Population growth? 2. Population concentration and leisure? 3. Invention of medicine? 4. Inventions such as the cotton gin, sewing maching, power loom, steam engine, steamboat, farm machinery? 5. Division of labor? 6. Information technology?

Page 6: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.
Page 7: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Why did population grow like this?

By chance at first and then this growth ignited the industrial revolution?

This is logical e.g. if this growth made the division of labor possible and then the greatly increased production…

Think of this as reaching the first rung on a fire escape ladder. Then you climb up the steps to the top.

Page 8: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Population concentration and leisure? Urbanization: concentrations needed for factory system concentrations create new markets

Leisure: For example, the aristocrat has the time to dabble in science.

Page 9: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Koch, Pasteur both 1800s

Virchow, Harvey 1800s & 1600s

Fleming, Jenner 1900s & 1700s

Page 10: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

The Semmelweis story reveals how bad medicine was even in the late 1800s.

Page 11: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Could inventors or even single inventions have caused the Industrial Revolution?

Or did it cause them?

Page 12: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Electricity:

In the 18th Century, electricity came to be understood and it was a frequent source of fun for parlour games.

Many of the practical applications didn't come until the 19th Century with inventions such as the electric light bulb, phonograph, motors.

Page 13: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

But, complete electrification came only by the 1930s in FDRs Rural Electrific- ation Administration the "REA"

Above: electric feed grinder;Below: rural creamery.

Page 14: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

The telephone:

When Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone and began to sell them, the value of a telephone to a given person generally increased as more people bought telephones.

Page 15: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

This illustrates the phenomenon of increasing returns (the opposite of what every economics student was taught, which was the "law of diminishing marginal returns").

This might happen with the current IT revolution caused by computers and the internet.

Page 16: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Adam Smith

and the

Division of

Labor

Was this the key?

Page 17: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Johannes Guttenberg

Inventor of the printing press.

Motive: He was trying to pay off some debts by making indulgences in large quantities for the church.

Page 18: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Marco Polo

The other leg of the "information revolution" that might have triggered the Industrial Revolution.

Page 19: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

But, what are the lessons for us? What does this imply for our IT revolution?My choices:1. Tech revolutions may take many decades, even centuries to play out.2. The current IT revolution was probably not the first.3. Pinning economic growth to a specific source is often difficult.4. IT revolutions may even accelerate due to increasing returns.

Page 20: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Growth in GDP depends on these factors:

1. Productivity growth. a. Technological change. b. Improvements in physical capital. c. Improvements in human capital -- education. 2. Growth in availability of factors.

Page 21: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

A look at U.S. recent productivity growth:

From 1965 up to 1997.

Page 22: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

The upturn in the 1990s.

Page 23: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Country Product

ivity

Country Product-

ivity

Australia 96 Italy 106

Austria 102 Japan 82

Belgium 128 The Neth. 121

Canada 97 Norway 126

Denmark 92 Spain 84

Finland 93 Sweden 93

France 123 Note Switzerl. 94

Germany 105 OECD Turkey 36

Greece 75 Average= United K. 100

Ireland 108 100 U.S. 120

Page 24: The IT Revolution and The New Economy. Objectives To understand better: 1. What the IT revolution means to the economy. 2. How the IT revolution compares.

Part 2: Recap and review: How does IT improve productivity in principle?

My personal choices:

1. Speeds up diffusion processes. 2. Improves matches of consumer and product. 3. Enables improved production process controls. 4. Improves matches in business to business markets. 5. Helps to create new products. 6. Others.


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