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Social Responsibility in the Information Age: Societal Challenges

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Title: Social Responsibility in the Information Age: Societal Challenges


1
Social Responsibility in the Information Age
Societal Challenges
  • GP Dhillon, PhD
  • Associate Professor of IS
  • School of Business, VCU

2
4 Assertions
  • The current move towards a service economy has
    its roots in the advances in information and
    communication technologies
  • Advances in information and communication
    technologies have created a borderless world
  • The emergent organizational form of the future is
    the infonet organization
  • The combination of information and communication
    technology advances, borderless world, emergent
    organizational forms are facilitating the
    emergence of corporate dominance relying more on
    regional cooperation than national affiliation

3
Assertion 1
  • The current move towards a service economy has
    its roots in the advances in information and
    communication technologies

4
Some facts questioning the traditional enterprise
logic (1)...
  • Decreased profitability of large corporations
  • average net after tax profit rate of American
    non-financial corporations has declined from a
    peak of 10 in 1965 (with a somewhat bouncing
    back between 1982 and 1985)
  • Fewer jobs
  • Americas largest 500 industrial companies failed
    to add a American jobs between 1975 and 1990
    there share of civilian labor force dropped from
    17 to 10 between 1975 and 1990.
  • Increased divergence between executives and
    workers
  • In 1960 a CEO of Americas 100 largest non
    financial corporation earned on average 190,000,
    i.e. 40 times the wage of an average factory
    worker (after taxes it was only 12 times). By
    1990 the CEO earned an average of 2 million - 93
    times the wage of his (rarely her) average
    factory worker (after tax it was 70 times)

5
Some facts questioning the traditional enterprise
logic(2)...
  • Increased divergence matched by increased
    inequality
  • Between 1977 and 1990 the average pretax earnings
    of the poorest fifth American decreased by 5.
    During the same period, the richest fifth became
    about 9 wealthier - before taxes. Income
    disparity was greatest between college and high
    school graduates.
  • Divergence of earning and places chosen to reside
  • Until 1970s average incomes of inhabitants of
    different towns or states was slowly converging,
    as industry spread outwards to embrace less
    developed areas of the nation. Since then the
    trend has been in the opposite direction.
  • Examples
  • Besides the US
  • Tokyo and outlying prefectures
  • Southern England and Midlands
  • Italys affluent north and more primitive south

6
So what...
  • Manifestation of the changes have same root cause
  • The emergence of the global economy and the
    societies that are being shaped as a consequence
  • It is now a reality to move money, factories,
    technology and equipment effortlessly across
    borders
  • For the US, the challenge goes far beyond that of
    being nationally competitive (i.e. protectionism,
    subsidizing, or extensive support of its
    corporations)
  • The challenge facing the US (the same facing
    every other nation) - is to increase the
    potential value of what its citizens can add to
    the global economy, by enhancing their skills and
    capacities and by improving their means of
    linking those skills and capacities to the world
    market.
  • To a large extent this can be achieved by
    developing distinctive competencies in using
    information and communication technologies in an
    innovative manner - at an individual,
    organizational and societal levels

7
Assertion 2
  • Advances in information and communication
    technologies have created a borderless world

8
Understanding challenges posed by the borderless
world
  • Ken Ohames 4 Is
  • Investment
  • Industry
  • Information technology
  • Individuals

9
Investment
  • Investment is no longer geographically
    constrained
  • Japan, for example, has an equivalent of US 10
    trillion stored away (even when the country
    itself hovers close to bankruptcy) in pension
    funds and life insurance programs
  • Today nearly 10 of US pension funds is invested
    in Asia. Ten years ago, that degree of
    participation in Asian markets would have been
    unthinkable

10
Industry
  • No longer do governments strike deals with host
    countries or governments. Multinational
    corporations move into certain areas (e.g. China
    and India) because it is attractive to do so.
    They bring in technology and know-how to do their
    work (not because they feel obliged to do so).
    These are their raw material.
  • US at the same time might look for decent China
    related opportunities by scouting out
    possibilities on the Shanghai stock exchange.
    This needs new skills (as opposed to evaluating
    GE, IBM or Unilever in the US).

11
Information technology
  • IT has made this cross border flow possible
  • E.g. product designers in Oregon can now control
    activities of a network of factories throughout
    Asia-Pacific.
  • E.g. engineers in Osaka can easily control plant
    operations in newly exciting parts of China like
    Dalian.

12
Individual
  • Emergence of an informed consumer

13
Why do we need to be concerned
  • Loss of traditional competitiveness
  • between 1969 and 1979 the value of manufactured
    imports relative to domestic production in the US
    surged from 14 to 38
  • In 1986 for every 100 spent on goods produced in
    the US, Americans were buying 45 worth of
    manufactured imports
  • In 1986, 66 of televisions and radios, 45 of
    all machine tools, 28 of all automobiles and 25
    of all computers were produced outside the US

14
Move from high volume to high value
  • Profits derive not from scale and volume, but
    from continuous discovery of new linkages between
    solutions and needs - e.g. computer manufacturers
    are in the service business where emphasis is on
    customizing software and integrating and
    installing systems around it - e.g. IBM
  • Necessary skills
  • problem solving - putting things together in
    unique ways
  • problem identification - helping customers
    identify their problems
  • strategic broker - linking problem solving and
    problem identification

15
Assertion 3
  • The emergent organizational form of the future is
    the infonet organization

16
Organizing logic of the future
17
The new web of enterprise
Strategic broker
Combination of unique skills
Problem identifier
Problem solver
18
Key characteristics of the enterprise of the
future
  • Speed and agility
  • Lower overheads - office buildings plant and
    equipment payroll (were necessary in the old
    enterprise for control and predictability)
  • Ability to switch directions quickly
  • Ability to discover new linkages between problems
    and solutions, wherever they may lie - blessed by
    information systems acumen, marketing know how
    and blessed with strategic and financial acumen
  • Few strategic brokers, problem identifiers and
    solvers work for high value enterprises - in the
    sense of salaries and steady jobs. They share the
    risks and returns

19
Common types of enterprise webs
  • Independent profit centers - eliminated middle
    men and pushes authority to problem solvers and
    identifiers (e.g. JJ HP GE ATT various
    publishing houses)
  • Spin-off partnerships - strategic brokers act as
    venture capitalists and midwives nurturing good
    ideas and then spinning off (e.g. Xerox 3M
    Hitachi - more than 60 companies, 27 traded
    publicly)
  • Spin-in partnership - good ideas emerge from
    problem identifiers and solvers outside the
    company. Strategic brokers facilitate in bringing
    them in (e.g. Sun and Cobalt)
  • Licensing - the franchise business
  • Pure brokering - Nike, Compaq, Apple II
  • Incubators

20
Questions
  • Manufacturing vs service
  • small vs large enterprises

21
Assertion 4
  • The combination of information and communication
    technology advances, borderless world, emergent
    organizational forms are facilitating the
    emergence of corporate dominance relying more on
    regional cooperation than national affiliation

22
Emergence of the interlinked economy (ILE)
  • Traditionally USA, Europe and Japan have formed
    a triad. More recently Hong Kong, Korea, Taiwan
    and Singapore have joined the ILE, while China,
    Malaysia, and Thailand have also been making
    their presence felt
  • Today
  • The Kansai area in Japan spanning across the
    three cities of Osaka, Kobe, and Kyoto. The
    region in itself represents a 500 billion
    economy.
  • The Shenzhen area in China which has a per capita
    GNP of 5695 (as compared to Chinas GNP of
    317).
  • The Spartanburg-Greenville belt in South Carolina
    in the US with over 215 international companies.
    Nearly 50 companies have their headquarters in
    this belt.
  • Singapore, Johore, Malaysia, and the Riau islands
    (Indonesia) including Batam have often been
    termed as the growth triangle.
  • Penang in Malaysia, Medan in Indonesia, and
    Phuket in Thailand represent another emerging
    growth triangle. In Penang for example the
    unemployment rate fell from 16 1969 to 2.9 in
    1994. In fact the GDP of Penang is 15 higher
    than the rest of Malaysia.

23
The three jobs of the future
  • By 1990, in the eyes of the Census, you were
    either
  • managerial and professional specialty
  • technical, sales and administrative support
  • service occupation
  • operator, fabricator, and laborer
  • transportation and material moving
  • This classification made sense for an economy
    focused on high volume

24
Three jobs of the future - cont/-
  • The 1990 census categories had little bearing
    upon the competitive positions of Americans
    worldwide
  • The emergent three categories are
  • routine production services repetitive tasks
    performed by old foot soldiers of American
    capitalism in high volume enterprises (include
    traditional blue collar and routine supervisory
    jobs including many information processing jobs)
  • in-person services simple and repetitive tasks
    done on a person-to-person basis - perhaps with
    some vocational training (waiters, waitresses
    nursing home aids, janitors, taxi drivers,
    secretaries etc)
  • symbolic-analytic services includes problem
    identifiers, problem solvers and strategic
    brokers (research scientists, design engineers,
    software engineers, civil engineers, investments
    bankers, a few creative accountants, lawyers
    ..)
  • These categories cover 3 out of 4 American jobs -
    others include farmers, miners etc, who
    constitute less than 5 of American workers
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