Idea:Robert Gordon: The Rise and Fall of Technological Impact
Type: person/economist | Created: 2025-08-12T13:57:00Z | ID: 20250812-1357-gordon-great-inventions-stagnation {{#if:|Confidence: {{{confidence}}}%|}}
Robert Gordon: The Rise and Fall of Technological Impact[edit]
Core Perspective[edit]
Robert Gordon argues that the era of transformative technological change that drove massive improvements in living standards (1870-1970) was a unique, unrepeatable "special century." Modern innovations, while impressive, have less impact on productivity and create less deflationary pressure than the great inventions of the past.
The Great Inventions Thesis[edit]
Revolutionary Period (1870-1970)[edit]
- Electricity: Transformed production and daily life
- Internal combustion: Revolutionized transport and cities
- Running water/sanitation: Eliminated disease, saved time
- Communications: Telegraph, telephone, radio, TV
- Chemicals/pharmaceuticals: Extended life, improved materials
Digital Era (1970-present)[edit]
- Limited scope: Mainly entertainment and communication
- Smaller impact: Less effect on total productivity
- Diminishing returns: Each innovation less transformative
- Narrow benefits: Concentrated in specific sectors
Impact on Value and Deflation[edit]
The Deflation That Was[edit]
Gordon documents how great inventions created massive deflation:
- 1900-1970: Real prices of basic goods plummeted
- Quality explosion: Products became incomparably better
- Time savings: Household production time freed up
- Health improvements: Life expectancy doubled
The Deflation That Isn't[edit]
Modern technology creates less deflationary pressure:
- Narrow impact: Only affects information goods
- Service resistance: Most economy remains labor-intensive
- Regulatory capture: Many sectors resist disruption
- Network effects: Create monopolies, not competition
Stakeholder Impacts[edit]
GDP and Productivity[edit]
- Measurement problems: GDP missed past improvements too
- Genuine slowdown: Not just measurement error
- One-time gains: Many improvements can't repeat
- Headwinds: Demographics, education, inequality, debt
Business Valuations[edit]
- Winner-take-all: Few companies capture most value
- Intangibles dominate: Physical capital less important
- Speculation increases: Fewer real opportunities
- Zombie firms: Low rates keep inefficient firms alive
Consumer Benefit[edit]
- Entertainment abundance: Massive content availability
- Communication ease: Global instant connection
- But basics stagnant: Housing, healthcare, education unchanged
- Time poverty: Despite labor-saving devices
Government Policy[edit]
- Fiscal pressure: Slower growth, rising costs
- Monetary confusion: Low inflation despite easy money
- Innovation policy: Desperate attempts to recreate past
- Inequality concerns: Benefits concentrated at top
The Productivity Paradox Explained[edit]
Gordon's framework explains why we see less deflation:
- Low-hanging fruit picked: Easy innovations done
- Regulatory moats: Incumbents protect positions
- Service economy: Less amenable to automation
- Complexity costs: Coordination overwhelms efficiency
Modern Technology Assessment[edit]
Where Tech Succeeds[edit]
- Information processing and transmission
- Entertainment and media
- Narrow AI applications
- Financial services
Where Tech Fails[edit]
- Physical world transformation
- Healthcare cost reduction
- Education productivity
- Housing affordability
Critical Quote[edit]
"The economic revolution of 1870 to 1970 was unique in human history, unrepeatable because so many of its achievements could happen only once."
Implications for Deflation Dynamics[edit]
Why Less Deflation Now[edit]
Gordon identifies structural reasons:
- Scope limitations: Digital affects small part of life
- Regulatory capture: Protected sectors resist change
- Human needs: Many services require human touch
- Physical constraints: Atoms harder than bits
Future Prospects[edit]
Gordon is pessimistic about future deflation:
- AI overrated: Limited to narrow domains
- Biotech expensive: Extends life but at high cost
- Climate costs: Environmental constraints raise prices
- Infrastructure decay: Deferred maintenance creates inflation
Policy Implications[edit]
For Innovation Policy[edit]
- Don't expect miracles from R&D spending
- Focus on removing regulatory barriers
- Accept slower growth as new normal
- Invest in human capital
For Monetary Policy[edit]
- Low inflation not sign of success
- Asset bubbles replace goods inflation
- Productivity stagnation is real
- New frameworks needed
Connection to Other Perspectives[edit]
Gordon's pessimism contrasts with:
- Schumpeter: Less creative destruction happening
- Baumol: Cost disease dominates progress
- Techno-optimists: Overestimate digital impact