Title: The Past, Present and Future of the ICT Revolution
 1The Past, Present and Future of the ICT 
Revolution 
- Kenneth I. Carlaw 
- Associate Professor, Economics 
- University of British Columbia  Canada 
- And 
- University of Waikato  New Zealand 
- kenneth.carlaw_at_ubc.ca 
2Broad Research Agenda
- Lipsey, Richard G., Carlaw, Kenneth I. and Cliff 
 Bekar (2005) Economic Transformations General
 Purpose Technologies and Long Term Economic
 Growth (Oxford University Press Oxford, UK)
- Agenda Understand (very) long run growth driven 
 by technological change
- Fact set History, 8000 BC to present 
- Proposition 1 General Purpose technologies 
 (GPTs) are necessary to rejuvenate and sustain
 growth in material wealth
- Proposition 2 Humans are technological animals 
3Preliminaries
- Transforming Power of Technology and Economic 
 Growth
- People in the 21st century experience measured 
 real consumption more than ten times larger than
 that of people at the beginning of the 20th
 century.
- But the whole story is not solely in the 
 measurements
- New Techniques 
- Electronic, CNC, robotized production versus 
 steam powered, belt driven factories
- New Commodities 
- ipods versus cheap cotton textiles 
- New forms of Organization 
- Just in time delivery systems versus steam 
 factories populated with children
4GPTs
- Definition 
- Initial scope for improvement 
- Range and variety of use 
- Complementarities 
- GPTs in history (24) 
- E.G., Writing (3000 BC), Electricity (19th  21st 
 century)
- Evolution of a typical GPT 
- Efficiency and Applications 
- Spillovers 
- Path dependence 
- Facilitating Structure
5The GPT of the Modern ICT Revolution 
- Programmable Computing Networks (PCN) 
- Devices that exploit flexible machine logic to 
 generate, transmit and process electronic
 information signals
- Includes computers and the internet
6The modern ICT revolution
- Structural Evolutionary transformation versus 
 Technological change
- S-E Transformations Modern ICT Revolution 
 compared to the First and Second Industrial
 Revolutions
- General Purpose Technologies (GPTs) are the prime 
 movers that drive economic growth and
 productivity growth
- In this case PCN 
7The two major questions
- What does the productivity slowdown tell us? 
- Where is the PCN in its development trajectory? 
- (i.e., how much more transformation of economies 
 and societies is to come from PCN can we foresee?)
8Two Views of Economic Processes and Productivity 
 9Productivity slowdown and ICT diffusion 
- Traditional view 
- Productivity paradox Solow (1987) 
- The computer is everywhere except in the 
 productivity statistics
- No paradox because ICT is not a revolutionary 
 technology Triplett (1999), Gordon (2000)
- The error here is that TFP is interpreted to be a 
 measure of technological change
10- Structural-Evolutionary View 
- TFP is not a measure of technological change 
- See Lipsey and Carlaw (2004) CJE 
- GPTs 
- arrive in crude forms 
- require costly, complementary innovation 
- require investment to become embodied in 
 pre-existing economic Structure
- often generate a productivity slowdown if they 
 require significant structural transformation
- See Paul David (1990), Cliff Bekar (Ph.D. Thesis) 
 and LCB (Chapter 15)
- Productivity bonus if there are any follow 
- Carlaw (2004) DCITA, and Carlaw and Lipsey (2005) 
 DCITA, Carlaw and Oxley (2005)
11Answer to question 2
- Hypothesis the GPT of Electronic ICT is at a 
 point in its efficiency and applications
 trajectories that is roughly comparable to the
 GPT of Electricity in about 1920-30
- Implication much of the economic and social 
 impact of PCN is yet to come via the continued
 (accelerating) proliferation of its applications
12Placing PCN in Its Efficiency Curve
- We simplify the many dimension of efficiency of 
 PCN into two broad categories
- Engineering Process Advances 
- E.g., Shrinking etching size of transistors 
- Logic Advances 
- E.g., the stored program computer, multi-core 
 processors, the software compiler and software
 optimization
13Engineering Process Advances
- Moores Law 
- the exponential revenue growth of the 
 semiconductor industry (averaging 16 per year)
 has continued unabated for 40 years
- there are more transistors produced per year (1 
 quintillion) than grains of rice, and each rice
 grain costs the same as 100s of transistors
14Logical Advances
- Stored programmable logic instructions 
- Both software and hardware instructions 
- Stored on the device 
- Changeable 
- New tasks accomplished by combining and 
 recombining basic logical instructions
- Instruction sets of greater complexity 
- Instruction sets themselves can be expanded 
- Device can be used for more applications 
- expansion in size and complexity 
15Two Logic Efficiency Effects
- The software hierarchy presents efficiency 
 opportunities
- Shifting complex functions between levels of the 
 hierarchy presents other opportunities
- Too many instructions at the lowest level implies 
 too much complexity in the hardware logic,
 reducing efficiency
- Too many instructions at the higher levels 
 increase the complexity of the software logic
 layers, reducing efficiency
- Optimization balances these
16Future Efficiency Gains
- Limits of CMOS 
- Multi-Core 
- Quantum computers 
- Nano-switches 
- Ray Kurzweil and the singularity 
- Extremely optimistic 
- There are always winners and losers with new 
 technology
17Placing PCN in its Applications Curve
- Diffusion and New Applications 
- The distinction is blurred 
- Diffusion 
- Practical measurement problems 
- We must rely on incomplete data 
- Usually collected by private commercial agencies 
- Expensive to acquire in terms of time and money 
- Often price data only 
- Diffusion data for specific categories 
- E.g., Figure 5.1 computer sale in Canada over time
18 Figure 5.1 Annual Sales of Personal Computers 
in Canada (millions) Source International 
Telecommunications Union (2005), Series I422  
 19New Applications Beget Applications
- We can only directly measure those that are 
 realised
- There are those that are not yet realised but are 
 enabled by the given GPT, given its current
 efficiency
20Measurement 
- We use a qualitative approach that exploits the 
 definition of the applications curve and its
 phases
- In phase 3 we will observe a proliferation of 
 applications that lead to further applications
- In phase 4 we will observe a slowing in both the 
 rate of applications generated and the follow on
 applications possible from those that are
 generated
- Applications become more specific an narrow 
21New Applications
- Computers that read your mind 
- Computing Researchers have developed a promising 
 new way to control computers by thought alone
- Cows go wireless 
- The use of electronic tags to track cattle and 
 monitor their health is likely to accelerate
- Robots, start your engines 
- Could a robot race funded by a military-research 
 organisation help to advance the development of
 autonomous fighting vehicles? We are already
 seeing this technology being used in Iraq and
 Afghanistan
- An open-source shot in the arm? 
- The open-source model is a good way to produce 
 software, as the example of Linux shows. Could
 the same collaborative approach now revitalise
 medical research too?
- In dust we trust 
- They have generated a lot of hype. But might 
 sensor networks, also known as smart dust,
 actually be useful?
22Comparing PCN and Electricity
- Electricitys transition to Phase 4 of its 
 efficiency and applications occurred about 80
 years after the invention of the dynamo
- If we take the beginning of PCN as the late 
 1940s, that GPT has been evolving in efficiency
 for about 60 years
- Electricitys efficiency increased by something 
 just less than one order of magnitude over its
 first 70 years
- PCNs efficiency has increased closer to an order 
 or magnitude every decade
23PCN and Electricity 
- Electricity in Phase 4 
- PCN in Phase 3
24Extrapolation of Real Price Index of Electricity 
for Canadian Domestic Use  
 25Conclusions
- Efficiency 
- PCN efficiency has increased rapidly over an 
 extended period of time
- PCN may be approaching Phase 4 of its efficiency 
 trajectory if one focuses on CMOS architecture
 but it is not there yet
- Multi-core processors, nanoswitches and quantum 
 computers offer scope for much further efficiency
 gain
26- Applications 
- We have seen from the sample of applications for 
 which we could get reliable data that their
 diffusion is far from complete
- Applications we are observing are enabling 
 applications
- Even if efficiency stopped increasing today (PCN 
 reached late Phase 4 or Phase 5 on its efficiency
 curve), many applications would remain to be
 exploited
- The union of PCN with biotechnology and 
 nanotechnology will spawn a set of new
 opportunities for inventions and innovations over
 at least the next half century with no
 foreseeable limit in size and scope of impact
27- Given the evidence, it seems clear that PCN will 
 continue to have a profound and formative
 influence on economic and social change for at
 least the next several decades, offering
 countless opportunities for the development and
 exploitation of new applications