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5 - “The $64,000 Question”: Living in the Age of Technological Possibility or Showing Possibility’s Age?

from Part III - Implications of Technology for Growth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2021

John W. Diamond
Affiliation:
Rice University, Houston
George R. Zodrow
Affiliation:
Rice University, Houston
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Summary

Will economic and productivity growth be slower going forward than in US experience over the past century or even over the postwar period, as techno-pessimists suggest? Or will technological changes usher in a new era of faster productivity growth and enhanced welfare? Are “headwinds” to growth from demographic, competitive, and social trends bound to blunt potential gains trumpeted by techno-optimists? This chapter describes the key arguments of the techno-optimists and the techno-pessimists. It argues that there is little a priori reason to doubt that technological advances will continue. The debate should focus on the link between those advances and broad measures of productivity growth. Consistent with early periods of technological diffusion, the time period between general technological advances and their impact on productivity may be long; the chapter extends these arguments to contemporary discussions of AI and machine learning. While it shares concerns about macroeconomic headwinds to growth, the chapter emphasizes microeconomic policies to support intangible capital accumulation and its diffusion to general productivity, and finds for the techno-optimists.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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