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Technology and Opportunity

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Sears, Roebuck and Montgomery Ward. Meatpacking. Swift and Armour. ... Where are today's counterparts of Sears, Roebuck and Montgomery Ward? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Technology and Opportunity


1
Technology and Opportunity
  • J. Bradford DeLong
  • U.C. Berkeley and NBER
  • October 8, 2002
  • For the Francisco Partners Fall 2002 Investors
    Conference
  • The Inn at Spanish Bay, Pebble Beach, CA

2
Weve Had Our Crash
  • Shiller's Irrational Exuberance predicted an up
    to 50 percent decline in the SP Composite.
  • Weve already had it.
  • We are still not back to historical price
    patterns
  • Current earnings yield on the SP is 3 percent.
  • Historical average yield is more like 5 to 7
    percent.
  • Historical average pricing patterns never made
    any sense
  • They made diversified equities overwhelmingly
    attractive.
  • But betting against them is very risky
  • The market can remain irrational longer than you
    can remain solvent."
  • We live in interesting times indeed.

3
Reasons for Investors to Be Optimistic
  • The information-age technological revolution
    continues as fast as ever, even through the
    recession.
  • Officially-measured labor productivity growth
    rate of 5 percent in 2002 is not out of the
    question.
  • Crude corrections for statistical biases lead to
    the guess that the average American worker will
    be 6 percent more productive in 2002 than in
    2001.
  • 6 percent productivity growth coupled with 3.5
    percent output growth bad news for workers
  • American workers will work 2.5 percent fewer
    hours in 2002 than in 2001--and the unemployed
    are not pleased.
  • Such an upward storm in productivity is unheard
    of in recession while the unemployment rate is
    still rising.

4
Durability of Productivity Surge
  • Unheard-of (for a recession) upward storm in
    productivity.
  • Most productivity gains will be captured by
    consumers and workers in lower prices and higher
    wages.
  • But some will be captured by firms in higher
    profits.
  • And the faster the productivity growth in the
    2000s, the greater is the profit slice of the
    pie.
  • Productivity in computation has improved at a
    steady pace of 60 percent per year since the end
    of the 1940s.
  • Our current technological revolution looks to
    be--relative to the size of the economy--fifteen
    times as big a deal as the original industrial
    revolution.
  • And the original industrial revolution was a big
    deal indeed.

5
Industrial Revolutions Create Mismatches
  • Huge mismatches between supply and demand
  • Newly-wealthy consumers demand things that do not
    yet exist.
  • Innovative producers see ways to produce what has
    been demanded in vastly cheaper ways.
  • Instead of a smooth flow of supply and demand,
    the economy becomes full of turbulence
  • Each vortex is the source of a fortune.
  • What kind of mismatches should we expect to see?
  • Historical analogies.

6
Historical Analogy Railroadization
  • Like much of telecom, software, and even
    hardware, railroads promised enormous economies
    of scale
  • Build it once, and then run any number of trains
    over it.
  • Like our modern data processing and data
    communications technologies, the railroad was an
    enormous technological leap
  • It lowered the cost land bulk transport by a
    hundredfold.
  • Like our internet boom, there was extraordinary
    and wild enthusiasm
  • If they could capture as profit just one-tenth of
    the cost savings the railroads
  • And like our internet bust, there were moments
    when investors in New York and London suddenly
    realized that they had been total fools.
  • Plus huge frauds

7
Fraud, Bust, and Reorganization
  • In the 1880s and 1890s J.P. Morgan and its
    clients picked up bankrupt railroads with greatly
    distressed debt for a song
  • Crammed unattractive junior securities down the
    throats of bondholders.
  • Found managers who could run them efficiently and
    profitably.
  • Without the burden of amortizing debt issued
    during the previous bubble the new managers could
    slash rates.
  • Vicious price wars.
  • Consequences of newly-cheap land transportation
  • Sears, Roebuck and Montgomery Ward.
  • Meatpacking. Swift and Armour.
  • But Federal preemption of state-level health and
    safety regulations.

8
Applying the Analogy
  • For the Baldwin Locomotive Compan of
    Philadelphia, read "Intel."
  • For Carnegie Steel, read "Cisco."
  • For the Central Pacific with its repeated
    bankruptcies, read "Global Crossing
  • lthough somehow I don't think we are likely to
    have a Winnick University at the end of all this.
  • The mass bankruptcies of 19th century railroads
  • Had everything to do with
  • Financial management.
  • Irrational exuberance
  • Had nothing to do with
  • technological opportunities and long-run benefits
    of rail transportation
  • So today's shakeout has little to do with
    ultimate economic benefits of computers and
    communications.

9
And What Are the New Industries of the Future?
  • Where are today's counterparts of Sears, Roebuck
    and Montgomery Ward?
  • Who will find that modes of information and
    product distribution that had previously been
    unthinkably costly are now gold mines?
  • Where are today's counterparts of Swift and
    Armour?
  • Who will build technologically-sophisticated
    systems--the equivalent of assembly-line
    slaughterhouses and refrigerated transport
    cars--on top of vastly cheapened high-bandwidth
    links?
  • If we can get the regulatory framework right.
  • Where are today's equivalents of Singer Sewing
    Machines?
  • Singer found that it could not sell sewing
    machines in its early years without providing a
    salesman to provide hands-on training in how to
    teach people to use sewing machine to each
    wholesale customer.
  • Could it have afforded to keep a large-enough
    sales force without the railroad?
  • I'm a professor. So I'm allowed to say that I
    leave these extensions as exercises for the
    students.
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