Friday, March 7, 2014

Economists and Insight


There seems to be a sudden interest in the automation of the manufacturing processes as well as in many other parts of our economy. What is quite surprising is the sudden discovery of this process, especially by academics, and moreover especially by economists.

So much of classic microeconomics is predicated on the assumption of massive capital investments and long capital lives of such investment. In the past thirty years we have seen shortened lives of capital plant and in some cases the elimination of such means of production totally. Vertical integration has migrated to globalization, in the extreme.

Now in a recent piece by a Berkeley Economist on the left there appears to be a sudden discovery of automation[1]. The author states:

In their compelling new book The Second Machine Age, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee document the progress in artificial intelligence that is enabling computers to exceed what they were capable of only a few years ago. The leaps in machine intelligence, along with the connection of human beings around the world in a common digital network, will enable the development of new technologies, goods and services. The authors are optimistic about the “bounty” or economy-wide benefits of brilliant machines. But they warn that the distribution or “spread” of these benefits will be uneven. Their fears are justified. During the last three decades, even before breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, computers have been replacing and multiplying the physical labor of human beings. Improvements in computer and communications technologies have also enabled employers to offshore many routine tasks that machines cannot directly replace.

Now, as I have noted several times in this line of discussion, it was Norbert Wiener in the late 1940s who first called out the changes to our economy by the use of intelligent machines in his many writings on Cybernetics. In fact, as the father of what we know see as “automated everything”, he raised the concern as to what this would do to our economy. Thus almost seventy years ago we knew what was happening and it was not just artificial intelligence.

The above sudden insight to artificial intelligence has itself been slowly evolving for almost the same period initiated also by Wiener’s colleagues and co-workers. Wiener had in the 40s a keen insight into the obvious which was totally missed by all economists for decades, and they seem now to want the praise for discovering it some seventy years after it was first well-articulated.