Title: Driving Toward Digital Prosperity
1Driving Toward Digital Prosperity
Presentation at the Gateway to Innovation
Conference April 30, 2008
- Dr. Robert Atkinson
- President
- Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
2Todays Presentation
- The Power of the IT Revolution
- IT and the Productivity Turnaround
- Five Big Trends
- Why IT is Important and What Regions Can Do To
Support It
3New General Purpose Technologies Drive Change
- Most innovations comes in incremental
improvements, with modest changes in products and
processes. - But approximately every half century a new
technology system emerges that impacts virtually
everything - what we produce,
- how we produce it,
- how we organize and manage production,
- the location of productive activity,
- the infrastructure needed,
- the laws required concerning issues as property
rights and permitted forms of business
organisation. - Since the mid-1990s IT has been the engine of
change and growth. -
4General Purpose Technologies Go Through Phases
- When the GPT begins life, it is usually in a
crude form that is only slowly improved and
adapted. - Later in its evolution, when it is becoming well
developed, its efficiency rises quickly and its
use rapidly and broadly proliferates. - Eventually physical limits are approached,
causing gains in efficiency to slow and adoption
rates to slow as all available applications are
used.
5We went from this
6To this.
7We Went From This.
8GPTs Have 3 Main Characteristics 1. They
undergo rapid price declines and
performance improvements.
9Moores Law Has Not Slowed Down (Transistor
Growth in Intel Computer Processor Chips)
10Moores Law Means that Computing Power is Almost
Free
Microsofts free Windows Live Hotmail email
service provides 5 GB of storage for subscribers.
It would cost Microsoft almost 100 million for
each subscriber if they used 1975 storage
technology.
(Intel processing costs in per MIPS)
11GPTs Have 3 Main Characteristics 1. They
undergo rapid price declines and performance
improvements.
2. They are pervasive.
12Computing Used To Be Scarce
13Now IT is Everywhere(70 of computer chips dont
go into computers)
The new John Deere Cotton Harvester John Deere
Co. CEO Bob Lane says he doesnt make tractors
but rather sophisticated mobile information
factories.
- GPS to show where it is.
- Microwave sensors to measure the flow of the
cotton. - RFID tag inserted into each bundle to let
processors know precise origin of the bundle. - Wireless data communications.
- The computing power of 8 PCs.
14IT Is a Growing Share of Capital Investment
15But Sectors Differ in Their IT Investment
Source Information Week, October 27, 2007
16GPTs Have 3 Main Characteristics 1. They
undergo rapid price declines and
performance improvements.
2. They are pervasive.
3. They make it easy to invent and produce new
products, processes and business models.
17IT Underpins Innovation
- Business models Wal-Marts supply chain
Amazons long tail iTunes and the decline bricks
and mortar music stores etc.
- Processes self-service mass customization
- supply-chain integration collaborative
design etc.
- Products/Services hybrid cars transportation
- telematics human genome etc.
18IT Drives Growth
19Better ToolsDrive Economic Growth
20Better IT ToolsDrive Todays Economic Growth
21IT Drives Productivity Growth(U.S. annual labor
productivity growth)
22Productivity Turnaround Has Been Powered by IT
- Oliner and Sichel found that the use and
production of computers were responsible for 0.92
percentage points of the 0.89 percentage point
increase in labor productivity growth rates
between 96-2001 and 91-95. - The OECD found that IT (production and use) was
responsible for 109 percent of the growth in
labor productivity from 1996 to 2002. - Similar effects in nations like Australia,
Canada, Finland, France, Finland, Germany, Korea,
Japan, the Netherlands and Switzerland.
23IT Does MatterIT is Correlated with Higher
Productivity and Profits
- On average, for every dollar invested in IT,
market valuation of a firm rises by over 10
(Brynjolfsson, Hitt, and Yang, 2002).
24But Its Not Just What You Invest, Its How You
Invest and What You Do With IT
- U.S. firms in the UK get 3 times more
productivity benefit from IT than do similar UK
firms. And over 80 percent of this advantage is
related to better use of IT. - U.S. firms had more flexible HR policies.
- U.S. firms devolved more IT authority to lower
levels.
25The IT-Engine Is Not Likely to Run Out of Gas
Anytime Soon
- The core technologies (memory, processors,
storage, sensors, displays, and communication)
continue to get better, faster, cheaper, and
easier to use, enabling new applications to be
introduced on a regular basis. - Many sectors, including manufacturing have not
fully tapped the potential of e-transformation. - Application use is growing, by business and
consumers and has not matured.
265 Trends
271) Everything That Can Be Digitized Will Be
- IT improvements voice recognition, visual
recognition, SOA. - Adoption Broadband, ubiquitous computing, e-gov,
e-commerce. - Sectors adoption (e.g., health care)
- Atoms to bits E-tickets E-cash E-forms
E-music, movies, books E-banking.
28Film Cameras vs. Digital Cameras
- (Source Canadian Imaging Trade Association
(2006). Industry Data, http//www.citacanada.ca/
News/industry.htm.)
292) The Rise of the Internet of Things
- Location services will be a next big thing (GPS
enabled cell phones to grow from 153 million
today to 590 million in 2011.) - Powered by IPV6 Enough to give multiple IP
addresses to every grain of sand on the planet
303) Mass Customization is Replacing Mass Production
- IT enables much of the economy to be more
customized - Dells "build-to-order" model.
- Architectural Skylight Company uses CAD to
automate the production of windows to architects'
specifications. - Pandora lets users create their own web-radio
station.
314) Innovation Is Becoming More Collaborative
- Firms are shifting from a model in which they
operated as silos separated from each other to
networked firms linked to suppliers, customers,
other organizations like universities, and even
competitors. - New and cheaper information and telecommunication
tools (grid computing IM telepresence desktop
collaboration tools) make collaboration easier. - IBMs Online Innovation Jam That Attracted More
Than 37,000 Posts. - Innocentives Online Portal In Which Problems
Posed By Business Are Outsourced To The General
Community For A Reward. - Boeing Designed Its Dreamliner In a Real Time
Global Collaborative Effort.
32IT Transformation Challenges
- Industry resistance.
- Lack of universal facilitators (smart cards,
digital signatures). - Digital divide and slow adopters.
- Lagging sectors (e.g., health care,
transportation, government, education). - Slow high speed broadband roll out.
- Lack of standards (e.g. manufacturing, health
care).
33Growing the IT Economy
34 Job Change in Technology vs. Manufacturing,
2004-2007
35Total Job Change in IT s. Manufacturing, 2004-2007
36Cities with a higher share of IT jobs grow faster
Drivers of the New Economy
37Cities with More A greater Share of IT Jobs See
Faster Growth In Income
Drivers of the New Economy
38Drivers of the New Economy
Wage Growth Increases with Digital Economy
1
Austin, TX
.8
.6
Wage Growth 1990-2000 (PMSA)
Grand Rapids, MI
San Diego, CA
.4
Rochester, NY
.2
5
-5
0
Presence of Digital Economy Factors
39IT and Tech Provide Higher Wage Jobs
- Nationally, the tech/IT industry paid an annual
average wage of 79,500, 87 more than the
average private sector wage of 42,400. - In the St. Louis metro area, computer-based
occupations paid an average of 65,290 per year,
compared with 38,930 for all occupations, and
32,850 for production occupations.
40High-Tech Jobs
41Information Technology Jobs
42What Can Regions Do?
43Spur IT Use By Citizens
- Work to expand digital literacy.
- Support broadband rollout (cities should
facilitate access to rights of way minimize
taxation of broadband, limit regulation of
broadband services, such as VOIP).
44Spur IT Use By Organizations
- Expand IT skills. Firms adopting higher levels
of IT use more skilled labor, - Drive e-government innovation to become a
leading-edge region in the use of IT in all
sectors (government, transportation, health care,
education, etc.) - Support organizations (public, private and
non-profit) learning from one another on IT
useage. - Foster venture, seed and angel capital for
IT-based startups.
45Spur IT Industry Development
- Support university IT and computer science
programs. - Facilitate inter-firm learning in part by
supporting IT cluster initiatives (e.g., Atlanta,
Seattle, Washington, DC) - Dont do the wrong things (like Marylands tax of
computer services).
46Rob Atkinson ratkinson_at_itif.org www.itif.org