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The Relationship between Information
Technology and Economic Policy
Moderator:
Jorma Ollila
Speakers:
Richard A. McGinn
J. Martin Taylor
Laura d’Andrea Tyson
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THERE was considerable disagreement as
to whether a "new economy’’ really exists or not, with
economists generally being skeptical and businesspeople more
enthusiastic. But there was general agreement that information
technology is beginning to produce a pay-off in terms of higher
productivity and lower inflation, and that policy-makers need to
rethink economic policy in the light of this good news. A few
participants warned that governments need to beware of the possible
downside of the IT revolution, such as the creation of monopolies,
the weakening of governments and the invasion of privacy.
FIRST PANELLIST
The debate about whether the new economy exists has occupied a huge
amount of time. Most economists say absolutely not; Silicon
Valley says absolutely yes; and the real answer remains
unclear.
Some things are clearly new. Wherever you look - at the share of
investment going into technology or at the number of households with
a computer or the number of people linked to the Internet - you
discover surging numbers. Technology is already giving us new ways
to do all sorts of old things, from education to entertainment. On
the other hand, the basic economic laws of supply and demand have
not changed; nor has human nature. Boom-bust cycles will continue.
People will continue to be carried away by greed and
euphoria.
But the sensitivity of economic relationships is clearly changing.
The fact that we can combine low unemployment with low inflation for
a sustained period of time is partly the result of the
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way that IT has spread insecurity. Even when the tight labour market
has driven wages up prices have not followed, thanks to higher
productivity. Four years ago, conventional wisdom said that the
economy could not grow at more than 2.5%. Today the growth rate is
clearly faster than that. The trick is to guard against letting our
guard slip (three years of excellent figures do not make a new
world) whilst not putting our foot on the brake unnecessarily. The
Federal Reserve has rightly adopted a flexible
monetary policy. Politicians have also rightly begun to worry about
the widening income gap between ordinary workers and people with
advanced degrees.
SECOND PANELLIST
We are in the middle of a revolution so profound that it is changing
everything (and even providing seedcorn for that other great
revolution, genomics.) This revolution is proceeding by "creative
destruction’’: yesterday’s leaders are today’s acquisition
candidates, not because they have lost their way particularly badly,
but because the rest of the world is changing so rapidly.
The rise of networks is producing huge changes, intended and
unintended. Traditional distribution networks are going out of date.
Supply chains are being strained. High-tech companies are engaging
in an intense war for talent - there are at least 100,000 high
paying jobs going begging in the United States - but at the same
time service jobs are being destroyed and manufacturing jobs being
exported abroad. The result is a two-tiered labour market.
Government statistics are almost certainly understating the
improvement in productivity being created by IT. The American
economy would be working at half its current level without the IT
revolution. Businesses are investing huge amounts of money in new
equipment - and streamlining their back offices as a result. The
ongoing IT revolution will continue to have a huge impact on the
wealth of nations. But we need to train more IT professionals. And
we need more investment in R&D. Govern-
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ment may be lousy at picking winners; but it can be very useful when
investing in fundamental research.
THIRD PANELLIST
Businesspeople have gone through two stages in thinking about
Information Technology. The first was to treat it as nothing more
than a tool. The second was to realize that IT is subverting all the
rules of business. Government is still stuck in the first stage; yet
over the next twenty years IT will fundamentally change everything
that government does, from tax to education - so it deserves our
attention.
Governments have started computerizing tax collection - but they
have not come to terms with how easy it will be to evade tax.
Governments have started worrying about short-term changes in
education - but they have not started asking themselves what schools
are for. Teaching? Socialisation? Or imprisonment? Only the last of
these functions will be unchanged by technology. Gathering
statistics will increasingly be a problem. Patterns of consumption
will shift. It will get increasingly hard to calculate a country’s
inflation or its GDP. Will the government be able to understand the
shift from "hardware’’ to "software’’? Will the government have the
imagination to push for more competition?
The new economic paradigm requires new policy responses. Europe
seems particularly far behind. The Euro will create a highly
rigid policy framework. The penalty for having a highly inflexible
labour market will only grow bigger as new technology takes hold.
The case for reform gets more urgent everyday - but if we do manage
to reform the system the added growth will at least allow us to pay
for the reconstruction of Serbia.
DISCUSSION
An American began the debate by asking whether it is possible to
conduct monetary policy in conditions of such uncertainty. The
important thing in public policy making, he argued, is to know what
you do not know. Policy-makers do not know how long the current
productivity boom will go on for; but they do not necessarily need
to be able to predict exactly what will be going on in five years
time to
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set monetary policy. They need to beware that as soon as the current
productivity increase stops, then all the old rules come back. They
also need to beware that, once it takes hold, inflation is extremely
hard to stop. Fortunately, the country knows that the Federal
Reserve has the guts to do whatever it takes to kill inflation:
witness the way that it doubled interest rates in 1994.
Some businesspeople questioned whether economists have been too
skeptical about the new economy. There is, argued one
American, a real danger that economists have underestimated what is
going on: that their tools have not changed fast enough to
understand a radically new reality. Industrialists will tell you
that they are achieving productivity increases that are twice the
official rate - or even more than that in Silicon Valley.
The reasons for this do not just lie in technology, though
technology is a crucial enabler. They also lie in the introduction
of new processes in the workforce. For the past decade American
companies have been mobilizing the knowledge of their workers more
efficiently and motivating them more effectively.
Another American, this time an economist, provided an alternative
view. There has, he admitted, been an undeniable increase in
productivity. This is having an important impact on policy -
allowing wages to rise in response to tight labour markets without
giving rise to inflation, and allowing interest rates to stay lower.
But it is still not clear why the United States is
getting more out of IT than the rest of the world. He suspected that
labour-market flexibility could be one important reason: European
companies that cannot lay-off workers do not have much of an
incentive to introduce new technology. Another reason is motivation.
America’s tax and compensation system gives managers an incentive to
adopt new techniques.
Several people looked at the effect of IT on government. One
European wondered whether there was a way of spreading best
practices. A Swiss speculated that IT would speed up decision-making
- and perhaps lead to more direct democracy. A panellist was also
intrigued by the possibility. The exorbitant cost of cam-
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paigns is largely being driven by the cost of television time.
Perhaps the Internet will help to cut the cost of campaigning. But
she pointed out that there is also a downside to a world of
instantaneous response: rumors circulate faster than ever and
financial markets become even more volatile. There may even be a
case for short-term capital controls, in order to put sand in wheels
that are moving too quickly.
This was only one of several reservations that some participants
expressed about the benefits of new technology. An American
politician asked what the public and private sectors were doing to
prepare for the Y2K problem, and what differences
there were between different countries. One panellist argued that in
advanced countries the private sector is well-prepared for Y2K
and the public sector is getting there; another panellist said that
some smaller companies have done little and there is a lot of
patchwork, particularly in the energy market. The moderator said
that the only part of Europe that really gives cause for concern is
Russia.
Some people worried about the impact of IT on privacy. An American
pointed out that government, with its rigid rules and fixed
hierarchies, will find it much harder to adapt to IT than either
business or civil society. A Swede pointed out that IT is making it
more difficult to raise all sorts of taxes - from capital to
expenditure to income - and wondered how we are going to finance
public services in the future.
There were also worries about the way in which the new economy
brushes up against old politics, notably anti-trust law. The
problem, pointed out one participant, is that technology seems to
concentrate power: thus Microsoft has a 90% market share, Intel an
85% share, and AT&T has jumped from nowhere to being a dominant
player in the cable industry. Does this mean that there is an
inherent tendency in network industries to create behemoths?
An Italian argued that there may be a downside to IT’s ability to
make markets and prices more transparent. Prices are falling
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more rapidly than costs, squeezing profits; companies that are worth
billions on the stock exchange usually lose money. This raises the
likelihood of long-term stagnation. A panellist disagreed. A lot of
Internet stocks are competing in a commodity world on the basis of
discounts, she argued; but in the long run they will adopt a
branding strategy with price differentials. Even Internet companies
are only worth the sum of their future earnings.
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