As it turns out, when tens of millions of people
are unemployed or underemployed,
there's a fair amount of interest in what technology might be doing to the labor force.
And as I look at the conversation, it strikes me
that it's focused on exactly the right topic,
and at the same time, it's missing the point entirely.
The topic that it's focused on, the question is whether or not
all these digital technologies are affecting people's ability
to earn a living, or, to say it a little bit different way,
are the droids taking our jobs?
And there's some evidence that they are.
The Great Recession ended when American GDP resumed
its kind of slow, steady march upward, and some other
economic indicators also started to rebound, and they got
kind of healthy kind of quickly. Corporate profits
are quite high. In fact, if you include bank profits,
they're higher than they've ever been.
And business investment in gear, in equipment
and hardware and software is at an all-time high.
So the businesses are getting out their checkbooks.
What they're not really doing is hiring.
So this red line is the employment-to-population ratio,
in other words, the percentage of working age people
in America who have work.
And we see that it cratered during the Great Recession,
and it hasn't started to bounce back at all.
But the story is not just a recession story.
The decade that we've just been through had relatively
anemic job growth all throughout, especially when we
compare it to other decades, and the 2000s
are the only time we have on record where there were
fewer people working at the end of the decade
than at the beginning. This is not what you want to see.
When you graph the number of potential employees
versus the number of jobs in the country, you see the gap
gets bigger and bigger over time, and then,
during the Great Recession, it opened up in a huge way.
I did some quick calculations. I took the last 20 years of GDP growth
and the last 20 years of labor productivity growth
and used those in a fairly straightforward way
to try to project how many jobs the economy was going
to need to keep growing, and this is the line that I came up with.
Is that good or bad? This is the government's projection
for the working age population going forward.
So if these predictions are accurate, that gap is not going to close.
The problem is, I don't think these projections are accurate.
In particular, I think my projection is way too optimistic,
because when I did it, I was assuming that the future
was kind of going to look like the past
with labor productivity growth, and that's actually not what I believe,
because when I look around, I think that we ain't seen nothing yet
when it comes to technology's impact on the labor force.
Just in the past couple years, we've seen digital tools
display skills and abilities that they never, ever had before,
and that, kind of, eat deeply into what we human beings
do for a living. Let me give you a couple examples.
Throughout all of history, if you wanted something
translated from one language into another,
you had to involve a human being.
Now we have multi-language, instantaneous,
automatic translation services available for free
via many of our devices all the way down to smartphones.
And if any of us have used these, we know that
they're not perfect, but they're decent.
Throughout all of history, if you wanted something written,
a report or an article, you had to involve a person.
Not anymore. This is an article that appeared
in Forbes online a while back about Apple's earnings.
It was written by an algorithm.
And it's not decent, it's perfect.
A lot of people look at this and they say, "Okay,
but those are very specific, narrow tasks,
and most knowledge workers are actually generalists,
and what they do is sit on top of a very large body
of expertise and knowledge and they use that
to react on the fly to kind of unpredictable demands,
and that's very, very hard to automate."
One of the most impressive knowledge workers
in recent memory is a guy named Ken Jennings.
He won the quiz show "Jeopardy!" 74 times in a row,
took home three million dollars.
That's Ken on the right getting beat three to one by
Watson, the "Jeopardy!"-playing supercomputer from IBM.
So when we look at what technology can do
to general knowledge workers, I start to think
there might not be something so special about this idea
of a generalist, particularly when we start doing things
like hooking Siri up to Watson and having technologies
that can understand what we're saying
and repeat speech back to us.
Now, Siri is far from perfect, and we can make fun
of her flaws, but we should also keep in mind that
if technologies like Siri and Watson improve
along a Moore's Law trajectory, which they will,
in six years, they're not going to be two times better
or four times better, they'll be 16 times better than they are right now.
So I start to think that a lot of knowledge work is going to be affected by this.
And digital technologies are not just impacting knowledge work.
They're starting to flex their muscles in the physical world as well.
I had the chance a little while back to ride in the Google
autonomous car, which is as cool as it sounds. (Laughter)
And I will vouch that it handled the stop-and-go traffic
on U.S. 101 very smoothly.
There are about three and a half million people
who drive trucks for a living in the United States.
I think some of them are going to be affected by this
technology. And right now, humanoid robots are still
incredibly primitive. They can't do very much.
But they're getting better quite quickly, and DARPA,
which is the investment arm of the Defense Department,
is trying to accelerate their trajectory.
So, in short, yeah, the droids are coming for our jobs.
In the short term, we can stimulate job growth
by encouraging entrepreneurship and by investing
in infrastructure, because the robots today still aren't
very good at fixing bridges.
But in the not-too-long-term, I think within the lifetimes
of most of the people in this room, we're going to transition
into an economy that is very productive but that
just doesn't need a lot of human workers,
and managing that transition is going to be
the greatest challenge that our society faces.
Voltaire summarized why. He said, "Work saves us
from three great evils: boredom, vice and need."
But despite this challenge, I'm personally,
I'm still a huge digital optimist, and I am
supremely confident that the digital technologies that we're
developing now are going to take us into a utopian future,
not a dystopian future. And to explain why,
I want to pose kind of a ridiculously broad question.
I want to ask what have been the most important
developments in human history?
Now, I want to share some of the answers that I've gotten
in response to this question. It's a wonderful question
to ask and to start an endless debate about,
because some people are going to bring up
systems of philosophy in both the West and the East that
have changed how a lot of people think about the world.
And then other people will say, "No, actually, the big stories,
the big developments are the founding of the world's
major religions, which have changed civilizations
and have changed and influenced how countless people
are living their lives." And then some other folk will say,
"Actually, what changes civilizations, what modifies them
and what changes people's lives
are empires, so the great developments in human history
are stories of conquest and of war."
And then some cheery soul usually always pipes up
and says, "Hey, don't forget about plagues." (Laughter)
There are some optimistic answers to this question,
so some people will bring up the Age of Exploration
and the opening up of the world.
Others will talk about intellectual achievements
in disciplines like math that have helped us get
a better handle on the world, and other folk will talk about
periods when there was a deep flourishing
of the arts and sciences. So this debate will go on and on.
It's an endless debate, and there's no conclusive,
no single answer to it. But if you're a geek like me,
you say, "Well, what do the data say?"
And you start to do things like graph things that we might
be interested in, the total worldwide population, for example,
or some measure of social development,
or the state of advancement of a society,
and you start to plot the data, because, by this approach,
the big stories, the big developments in human history,
are the ones that will bend these curves a lot.
So when you do this, and when you plot the data,
you pretty quickly come to some weird conclusions.
You conclude, actually, that none of these things
have mattered very much. (Laughter)
They haven't done a darn thing to the curves. (Laughter)
There has been one story, one development
in human history that bent the curve, bent it just about
90 degrees, and it is a technology story.
The steam engine, and the other associated technologies
of the Industrial Revolution changed the world
and influenced human history so much,
that in the words of the historian Ian Morris,
they made mockery out of all that had come before.
And they did this by infinitely multiplying the power
of our muscles, overcoming the limitations of our muscles.
Now, what we're in the middle of now
is overcoming the limitations of our individual brains
and infinitely multiplying our mental power.
How can this not be as big a deal as overcoming
the limitations of our muscles?
So at the risk of repeating myself a little bit, when I look
at what's going on with digital technology these days,
we are not anywhere near through with this journey,
and when I look at what is happening to our economies
and our societies, my single conclusion is that
we ain't seen nothing yet. The best days are really ahead.
Let me give you a couple examples.
Economies don't run on energy. They don't run on capital,
they don't run on labor. Economies run on ideas.
So the work of innovation, the work of coming up with
new ideas, is some of the most powerful,
some of the most fundamental work that we can do
in an economy. And this is kind of how we used to do innovation.
We'd find a bunch of fairly similar-looking people
— (Laughter) —
we'd take them out of elite institutions, we'd put them into
other elite institutions, and we'd wait for the innovation.
Now — (Laughter) —
as a white guy who spent his whole career at MIT
and Harvard, I got no problem with this. (Laughter)
But some other people do, and they've kind of crashed
the party and loosened up the dress code of innovation.
(Laughter)
So here are the winners of a Top Coder programming challenge,
and I assure you that nobody cares
where these kids grew up, where they went to school,
or what they look like. All anyone cares about
is the quality of the work, the quality of the ideas.
And over and over again, we see this happening
in the technology-facilitated world.
The work of innovation is becoming more open,
more inclusive, more transparent, and more merit-based,
and that's going to continue no matter what MIT and Harvard
think of it, and I couldn't be happier about that development.
I hear once in a while, "Okay, I'll grant you that,
but technology is still a tool for the rich world,
and what's not happening, these digital tools are not
improving the lives of people at the bottom of the pyramid."
And I want to say to that very clearly: nonsense.
The bottom of the pyramid is benefiting hugely from technology.
The economist Robert Jensen did this wonderful study
a while back where he watched, in great detail,
what happened to the fishing villages of Kerala, India,
when they got mobile phones for the very first time,
and when you write for the Quarterly Journal of Economics,
you have to use very dry and very circumspect language,
but when I read his paper, I kind of feel Jensen is trying
to scream at us, and say, look, this was a big deal.
Prices stabilized, so people could plan their economic lives.
Waste was not reduced; it was eliminated.
And the lives of both the buyers and the sellers
in these villages measurably improved.
Now, what I don't think is that Jensen got extremely lucky
and happened to land in the one set of villages
where technology made things better.
What happened instead is he very carefully documented
what happens over and over again when technology
comes for the first time to an environment and a community.
The lives of people, the welfares of people, improve dramatically.
So as I look around at all the evidence, and I think about
the room that we have ahead of us, I become a huge
digital optimist, and I start to think that this wonderful
statement from the physicist Freeman Dyson
is actually not hyperbole. This is an accurate assessment of what's going on.
Our digital -- our technologies are great gifts,
and we, right now, have the great good fortune
to be living at a time when digital technology is flourishing,
when it is broadening and deepening and
becoming more profound all around the world.
So, yeah, the droids are taking our jobs,
but focusing on that fact misses the point entirely.
The point is that then we are freed up to do other things,
and what we are going to do, I am very confident,
what we're going to do is reduce poverty and drudgery
and misery around the world. I'm very confident
we're going to learn to live more lightly on the planet,
and I am extremely confident that what we're going to do
with our new digital tools is going to be so profound
and so beneficial that it's going to make a mockery
out of everything that came before.
I'm going to leave the last word to a guy who had
a front row seat for digital progress,
our old friend Ken Jennings. I'm with him.
I'm going to echo his words:
"I, for one, welcome our new computer overlords." (Laughter)
Thanks very much. (Applause)