
- 245 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
This book examines the economic logic of the significant variation in growth over long periods.
What's necessary for the U.S. and other developed nations to realize stronger growth and more equal incomes? What's necessary for families to feel vacations, college educations, and retirements are possible? Will artificial intelligence (AI) automate or augment workers' jobs? Will the 2020-2021 global pandemic be sufficiently disruptive to deliver fundamental transformation?
Economic success in the decades ahead will depend on the willingness of households, businesses, and governments to innovate and change ways of living and working.
To explore these questions, the 4th Industrial Revolution is a unique frame to assess global economic transformation, providing a point-in-time reference for placing current events in the context of sustained, multi-decade periods of faster and slower growth. Political, social, and economic metamorphoses have accompanied each revolution.
This book examines the economic logic of the significant variation in growth over long periods.
Climate change and the global warming consequences of fossil-fuel technologies will need to bring about a new energy technology and, if successful, result in renewable energy sources, reducing energy expense.
The success of the 4th Industrial Revolution is not assured. While the future is uncertain, history suggests success requires that barriers are addressed, workers and businesses engage in the necessary change, and a positive policy response provides the needed leadership.
The book proposes a Growth and Fairness Agenda and a New Social Contract through which stronger economic growth and more equally distributed incomes can be possible.
- Recognize traditional policy actions may be insufficient to achieve stronger long-term growth.
- Promote improved confidence and a positive outlook among small and medium enterprises.
- Encourage advances in AI technology while addressing risks and fairness issues.
- Support deeper worker engagement between business leaders and workers.
- Seek a new social contract among workers, businesses, and governments.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Description
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Testimonials
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 Introduction: The Growth Revolution Ahead
- Chapter 2 Industrial Revolution, Growth, and Technological Change
- Chapter 3 Four Industrial Revolutions
- Chapter 4 Superstar Firms, Knowledge Transfer, and Labor Income Share
- Chapter 5 Resource Transformation as Growth Recovers
- Chapter 6 Conclusion: Is a Growth Revolution Possible?
- Epilogue Know Unknows
- Appendix A Dating Major Global Financial Crises
- Appendix B Long-Lived Capital With Embedded Tangible and Intangible Capital
- Appendix C Capital Investment and Income Generation
- Appendix D Shifting Labor Income Shares in the First Industrial Revolution
- Appendix E Technology and Changing Elasticity of Substitution
- Appendix F Employee Trust and Productivity
- References
- About the Author
- Index
- Backcover