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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,727 posts)
Fri Dec 9, 2016, 05:27 PM Dec 2016

The Economys Hidden Problem: Were Out of Big Ideas

This was on the front page of Wednesday's The Wall Street Journal.

Dismal Science | The Economy’s Hidden Problem: We’re Out of Big Ideas

Updated Dec. 6, 2016 1:31 p.m. ET

The Economy’s Hidden Problem: We’re Out of Big Ideas

Dwindling gains in science, medicine and technology hold back growth; is America too risk-averse?

By Greg Ip

greg.ip@wsj.com

By all appearances, we’re in a golden age of innovation. Every month sees new advances in artificial intelligence, gene therapy, robotics and software apps. Research and development as a share of gross domestic product is near an all-time high. There are more scientists and engineers in the U.S. than ever before. ... None of this has translated into meaningful advances in Americans’ standard of living.

Economies grow by equipping an expanding workforce with more capital such as equipment, software and buildings, then combining capital and labor more creatively. This last element, called “total factor productivity,” captures the contribution of innovation. Its growth peaked in the 1950s at 3.4% a year as prior breakthroughs such as electricity, aviation and antibiotics reached their maximum impact. It has steadily slowed since and averaged a pathetic 0.5% for the current decade.

Outside of personal technology, improvements in everyday life have been incremental, not revolutionary. Houses, appliances and cars look much like they did a generation ago. Airplanes fly no faster than in the 1960s. None of the 20 most-prescribed drugs in the U.S. came to market in the past decade.

The innovation slump is a key reason the American standards of living have stagnated since 2000. Indeed, absent a turnaround, that stagnation is likely to continue, deepening the malaise that has left the middle class so dissatisfied.
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The Economys Hidden Problem: Were Out of Big Ideas (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2016 OP
Any productivity improvements are going to exboyfil Dec 2016 #1
No, we're just out of new, shiny ideas Warpy Dec 2016 #2
I don't think AI is going to be good for us pscot Dec 2016 #3

exboyfil

(17,865 posts)
1. Any productivity improvements are going to
Fri Dec 9, 2016, 05:49 PM
Dec 2016

go into the pockets of the shareholders and the high level managers. There is no money to pay for these wonderful innovations. Not enough rich passengers to support a SST for example.

A argument can be made that we are in the age of information (or mass media). We have a significant portion of the knowledge in the world a mouse click away. This is truly revolutionary.

Warpy

(111,437 posts)
2. No, we're just out of new, shiny ideas
Fri Dec 9, 2016, 06:05 PM
Dec 2016

Musty, dusty Keynes still has his place, since he is the only one to have come up with a theory that works in practice without inviting the thieves to set up shop and making the economy so topheavy it crashes.

Economists hate Keynes because of that, so they're always trying to come up with pet theories to outdo him. They can modify his theory to fit other sets of parameters, but they can't dismiss it completely.

Until they let go of the fantasy of coming up with something new and different that doesn't require fairy dust on an invisible hand to work, we're going to be stuck with stagnation and malaise.

pscot

(21,024 posts)
3. I don't think AI is going to be good for us
Sat Dec 10, 2016, 02:29 PM
Dec 2016

It seems more likely to result in a return to serfdom for a permanent, jobless proletariat comprised of most of humanity.

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