The Digital Revolution Is Eating Its Young
Apr 14, 2021MARK ESPOSITO, LANDRY SIGNÉ, NICHOLAS DAVIS
We are facing an acute crisis of technological opportunity and access,
owing to an invasive business model that has proven incapable of supporting
equity and inclusion. The stakes are high, and the market won’t fix the
problem.
CAMBRIDGE – As massive online platforms have given rise to numerous virtual
marketplaces, a gap has opened between the real and the digital economy. And by
driving more people than ever online in search of goods, services, and
employment, the coronavirus pandemic is widening it. The risk now is that a new
digital industrial complex will hamper market efficiency by imposing rents on
real-economy players whose daily operations depend on technology.
The premise of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR)
is that the tangible and intangible elements of today’s economy can coexist and
create new productive synergies. The tangible side of the economy provides the
infrastructure upon which automation, manufacturing, and complex trade networks
rest, and intangibles – logistics, communication, and other software and Big
Data applications – allow for these processes to achieve optimal efficiency.
More to the point, the tangible economy is a prerequisite for
the intangible economy. Through digitalization, tangibles can become
intangibles and then overcome traditional limitations on scale and value
creation. While heavily transactional and capital-intensive, this process
hitherto has been a positive mechanism for growth, providing some equity of
opportunities for small and large countries alike.
But this standard account of the 4IR omits the recent decoupling of the
digital and real sectors of the economy. Digitally native companies that
benefited from the suspension of traditional factors of production have been
growing even faster than they
did before COVID-19.
By the beginning of September 2020, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple’s share
prices had more than doubled since the start of the pandemic, with Apple
becoming the first company ever
to achieve a $2 trillion valuation. And while shares of Netflix and Alphabet
(Google) – the other so-called FAANG firms – hadn’t quite doubled, they were
nonetheless trading at or near all-time highs. Meanwhile, ExxonMobil, the
S&P 500’s oldest member and a former icon of the tangible economy,
was driven out of the
index by Apple’s decision to split its stock. Those who own and run the tech
giants are making ever more money while the rest of the world continues to
experience economic devastation.
With real-economy assets being positioned far below digital financial
assets, a K-shaped corporate recovery has emerged. Digital firms can grow
apparently without limit, whereas others’ growth remains circumscribed by the
finite conditions under which they operate. This trend is not only challenging
neoliberal assumptions about the creation of value; it is also pushing us
toward a scenario in which government policies to redistribute value will no
longer be plausible options.
To be sure, governments and some within the private sector have proposed
remedies, such as a tax on digital assets,
while proponents of a laissez-faire approach continue to insist that any form
of government intervention will merely introduce more market distortions. But
neither camp has offered enough evidence for its preferred policy.
We suggest three other solutions. First, government grants and subsidies
can be used to promote technological diffusion, and to close the technology gap
between platforms and small and medium enterprises. Rather than expecting the
market to provide equitable access to technologies like artificial
intelligence, governments can fund programs that reach smaller firms
directly, such as through tax write-offs or other measures (as already happens
with incentives for consumers to buy environmentally friendly cars). While such
outlays would increase public debt in the short term, these costs would be
offset by the higher productivity that would come with a more balanced
distribution of economic power.1
Second, we should be working toward a more agile, multi-stakeholder model
of innovation, so that concerns about inclusion and representation are
addressed without curtailing the pace of technological advance. The goal, here,
should be to reduce the tensions between winners and losers across the platform
economy’s new value chains. Several existing cases have demonstrated that proper representation
of stakeholder interests enables policymakers to mitigate the harms and adverse
unintended consequences of new technologies without sacrificing speed or
flexibility.
Third, it is time to start identifying appropriate areas for “digital
protectionism.” Just as some countries use trade tariffs to support nascent
local production, digital tariffs could be used to foster local innovation
ecosystems. This would not work everywhere. But in places that have reached
some threshold of technological adoption and diffusion, such policies could
encourage grassroots solutions, creating new community-based approaches to
managing how technology is designed, deployed, and funded.
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The post-pandemic world will be characterized by a limping economy, a
generalized fear for the future, and a growing realization of all the ways that
economic life has changed. Under the right conditions, technological diffusion,
multi-stakeholder innovation, and digital protectionism could reduce people’s
dependence on the multinationals that have been shaping the terms of technology
for their own benefit, and with little consideration for the needs or values of
specific communities.
We are facing an acute crisis of technological opportunity and access,
owing to an invasive business model that has proven incapable of supporting
equity and inclusion. The stakes are high, and the market won’t fix the
problem. There are ways to ensure that the digital revolution benefits the
many, not just the few; but they will require that we rethink how we pursue
innovation and create value in the twenty-first century.
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Writing for PS since 2014
7 Commentaries
Mark
Esposito, a co-founder of Nexus FrontierTech, has held appointments and
fellowships at the Hult International Business School, Harvard University,
Cambridge University, and Arizona State University, where he co-directs the 4IR
Research Initiative at the Thunderbird School of Global Management. He is the
co-author, most recently, of The AI Republic: Building the Nexus Between Humans and
Intelligent Automation.
Writing for PS since 2018
6 Commentaries
Landry
Signé, a professor and senior director at Arizona State University’s
Thunderbird School of Global Management, is a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution, a distinguished fellow at Stanford University, a member of the
World Economic Forum’s Regional Action Group for Africa, and the author, most
recently, of Unlocking
Africa’s Business Potential.
Writing for PS since 2017
2 Commentaries
Nicholas
Davis is Head of Society and Innovation at the World Economic Forum.
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