(Gordon 2012) made a study analyzing
US's economy since 1300s in the light of industrial revolutions. He made some insights,
but the fact that he over-focused on the implications of industrial revolution
and took other critical factors such as political adjustment and foreign investment
for granted, poses some concern about the biased-ness of his view. Following is
some points from the paper.
Since Solow’s seminal work in the 1950s, economic growth has been
regarded as a continuous process that will persist forever. But there was
virtually no economic growth before 1750, suggesting that the rapid progress
made over the past 250 years could well be a unique episode in human history
rather than a guarantee of endless future advance at the same rate.
The frontier established by the U.S. for output per capita, and the U.
K. before it, gradually began to grow more rapidly after 1750, reached its
fastest growth rate in the middle of the 20th century, and has slowed down since.
It is in the process of slowing down further.
A useful organizing principle to understand the pace of growth since
1750 is the sequence of three industrial revolutions. The first (IR #1) with
its main inventions between 1750 and 1830 created steam engines, cotton
spinning, and railroads. The second (IR #2) was the most important, with its
three central inventions of electricity, the internal combustion engine, and
running water with indoor plumbing, in the relatively short interval of 1870 to
1900. Both the first two revolutions required about 100 years for their full
effects to percolate through the economy. During the two decades 1950-70 the
benefits of the IR #2 were still transforming the economy, including air
conditioning, home appliances, and the interstate highway system. After 1970
productivity growth slowed markedly, most plausibly because the main ideas of
IR #2 had by and large been implemented by then.
The computer and Internet revolution (IR #3) began around 1960 and
reached its climax in the dot.com era of the late 1990s, but its main impact on
productivity has withered away in the past eight years. Many of the inventions
that replaced tedious and repetitive clerical labor by computers happened a
long time ago, in the 1970s and 1980s. Invention since 2000 has centered on
entertainment and communication devices that are smaller, smarter, and more
capable, but do not fundamentally change labor productivity or the standard of
living in the way that electric light, motor cars, or indoor plumbing changed
it.
The article suggests that it is useful to think of the innovative
process as a series of discrete inventions followed by incremental improvements
which ultimately tap the full potential of the initial invention. For the first
two industrial revolutions, the incremental follow-up process lasted at least
100 years. For the more recent IR #3, the follow-up process was much faster.
Taking the inventions and their follow-up improvements together, many of these
processes could happen only once. Notable examples are speed of travel,
temperature of interior space, and urbanization itself.
The benefits of ongoing innovation on the standard of living will not
stop and will continue, albeit at a slower pace than in the past. But future
growth will be held back from the potential fruits of innovation by six
“headwinds” buffeting the U.S. economy, some of which are shared in common with
other countries and others are uniquely American. Future growth in real GDP per
capita will be slower than in any extended period since the late 19th century,
and growth in real consumption per capita for the bottom 99 percent of the
income distribution will be even slower than that.
REFERENCE
Gordon,
R. J. (2012) 'Is U.S. Economic Growth Over? Faltering Innovation Confronts the
Six Headwinds'.
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