2/22/2018

Learning by Doing The Real Connection between Innovation, Wages, and Wealth


An important study of the relationship between technology, skills, and economic inequality that answers some of the most pressing economic questions of our time

Today’s great paradox is that we feel the impact of technology everywhere—in our cars, our phones, the supermarket, the doctor’s office—but not in our paychecks. In the past, technological advancements dramatically increased wages, but for three decades now, the median wage has remained stagnant. Machines have taken over much of the work of humans, destroying old jobs while increasing profits for business owners. The threat of ever-widening economic inequality looms, but in Learning by Doing, James Bessen argues that increased inequality is not inevitable.

Workers can benefit by acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to implement rapidly evolving technologies; unfortunately, this can take years, even decades. Technical knowledge is mostly unstandardized and difficult to acquire, learned through job experience rather than in the classroom. As Bessen explains, the right policies are necessary to provide strong incentives for learning on the job. Politically influential interests have moved policy in the wrong direction recently. Based on economic history as well as analysis of today’s labor markets, his book shows a way to restore broadly shared prosperity.
James Bessen, an economist, is a lecturer at Boston University Law School. He was founder and CEO of a software company that developed the first desktop publishing program.

yalebooks.yale.edu


True Cost Economics

True cost economics is an economic model that seeks to include the cost of negative externalities into the pricing of goods and services. Proponents of this type of economic system feel products and activities that directly or indirectly cause harmful consequences to living beings and/or the environment should be taxed accordingly to reflect their hidden costs.

Read more: True Cost Economics https://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/truecosteconomics.asp#ixzz57fMQj7pz
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Economic Man

Economic man refers to an idealized human being who acts rationally and with complete knowledge, who seeks to maximize personal utility or satisfaction. Economic man is an assumption of many economic models, and is also known as homo economicus.

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Rally

What is a 'Rally'?

A rally is a period of sustained increases in the prices of stocks, bonds or indexes. This type of price movement can happen during either a bull or a bear market, when it is known as either a bull market rally or a bear market rally, respectively. However, a rally will typically follow a period of flat or declining prices.

BREAKING DOWN 'Rally'

A rally is caused by a significant increase in demand resulting from a large influx of investment capital into the market. This leads to the bidding up of prices. The length or magnitude of a rally depends on the depth of buyers along with the amount of selling pressure they face. For example, if there is a large pool of buyers but few investors willing to sell, there is likely to be a large rally. If, however, the same large pool of buyers is matched by a similar amount of sellers, the rally is likely to be short and the price movement minimal.


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Too Big To Fail

What is 'Too Big To Fail'?

"Too big to fail" describes the concept whereby a business has become so large that a government will provide assistance to prevent its failure because not doing so would have a disastrous ripple effect throughout the economy. If a large company fails, companies that rely on it for portions of their income might also be extinguished along with the employment they provide. Therefore, if the cost of a bailout is less than the cost of the failure to the economy, a government may decide a bailout is the most cost-effective solution.


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How does Twitter make money?

Twitter (TWTR) is a social media company that provides a network connecting users to people, information, ideas, opinions, and news. The company's services include live commentary, live connections and live conversations through mobile devices and the Internet. The company can also be used as a marketing tool for businesses.

How Twitter Makes Money

Twitter earns 86 percent or more of its revenue from advertising. In the fiscal year 2017, Twitter posted an advertising revenue of $2.1 billion, which was a six percent decrease of what the social media site brought in during the same time in 2016.
Twitter uses promoted tweets, promoted accounts and promoted trends. Twitter also sells promoted tweets to marketers, and these then appear in users' Twitter feeds. The company creates tailored advertising opportunities by using an algorithm to make sure promoted tweets make it into the right users' timelines. Promoted accounts are those paid for by an advertiser that Twitter places in targeted users' "Who to Follow" list. 


Read more: How does Twitter make money? | Investopedia https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/120114/how-does-twitter-twtr-make-money.asp#ixzz57fReFZFu
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Bridgewater's Dalio Sees 70 pct Chance of Recession Before 2020

Billionaire investor Ray Dalio, who founded world's largest hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, thinks there is a relatively high chance the U.S. economy will stumble into a recession before the next presidential election in 2020.
Dalio said the U.S. economy is not currently in a bubble. But he reasoned that it might not take long to get there and then to move on to a "bust" phase.
"I think we are in a pre-bubble stage that could go into a bubble stage ... The probability of a recession prior to the next presidential election would be relatively high, maybe 70 percent, Daliosaid during an appearance at the Harvard Kennedy School's Institute of Politics.
Dalio, whose fund invests some $160 billion, stepped down from the hedge fund's day-to-day operations nearly a year ago, but his views on markets and the economy are still very closely followed.


Read more: Bridgewater's Dalio Sees 70 pct Chance of Recession Before 2020 | Investopedia https://www.investopedia.com/partner/reuters/bridgewaters-dalio-sees-70-pct-chance-recession-2020-0/#ixzz57fRAW6Gr
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Blockchains and Bitcoin

The blockchain is perhaps the main technological innovation of Bitcoin. Bitcoin isn’t regulated by a central authority. Instead, its users dictate and validate transactions when one person pays another for goods or services, eliminating the need for a third party to process or store payments. The completed transaction is publicly recorded into blocks and eventually into the blockchain, where it’s verified and relayed by other Bitcoin users. On average, a new block is appended to the blockchain every 10 minutes, through mining.
Based on the Bitcoin protocol, the blockchain database is shared by all nodes participating in a system. Upon joining the network, each connected computer receives a copy of the blockchain, which has records, and stands as proof of, every transaction ever executed. It can thus provide insight about facts like how much value belonged a particular address at any point in the past. Blockchain.info provides access to the entire Bitcoin blockchain.


Read more: Blockchain Definition | Investopedia https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/blockchain.asp#ixzz57fQWjyyW
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What is a 'Blockchain'

A blockchain is a digitized, decentralized, public ledger of all cryptocurrency transactions. Constantly growing as ‘completed’ blocks (the most recent transactions) are recorded and added to it in chronological order, it allows market participants to keep track of digital currency transactions without central recordkeeping. Each node (a computer connected to the network) gets a copy of the blockchain, which is downloaded automatically.
Originally developed as the accounting method for the virtual currency Bitcoin, blockchains – which use what's known as distributed ledger technology (DLT) – are appearing in a variety of commercial applications today. Currently, the technology is primarily used to verify transactions, within digital currencies though it is possible to digitize, code and insert practically any document into the blockchain. Doing so creates an indelible record that cannot be changed; furthermore, the record’s authenticity can be verified by the entire community using the blockchain instead of a single centralized authority.


Read more: Blockchain Definition | Investopedia https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/blockchain.asp#ixzz57fQFFYTc
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Gobal Beer Market...

Global beer market is expected to $688.4 billion by 2020.

Bitcoin and Blockchain: The Potential for Remittances and Supply Chain Management

Indian families living abroad may be able to benefit from Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, and other blockchain innovations. Prof. Raul Dé at the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore says the technology may make remittance payments faster, cheaper, and more transparent. However, some regulation and streamlining is needed to ensure the technology reaches its peak safety and efficiency.
  • Rahul Dé  Hewlett-Packard Chair Professor, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore
FEBRUARY 09, 2018

Where Is the Auto Industry Headed?

Self-driving cars promise a profound change to our day-to-day experience of transportation, perhaps eliminating the scourge of congestion with clever algorithms or even turning the daily grind of the commute into a leisure hour. How this nascent technology evolves will also reshape the auto industry, pitting industrial stalwarts against tech-industry newcomers. Prof. Jeffrey Sonnenfeld spoke with former Ford CEO Mark Fields about what’s next for the car business.
MARK FIELDS 
 

Why Is Healthcare So Expensive?

The data covers 2007 to 2011 and more than 88 million unique individuals, or nearly one in three individuals in the U.S. with private health insurance. While it is anonymized, the data are incredibly granular. Basically, we have claims-level data for 1% of GDP each year.
There’s a lot we haven’t known about why healthcare in the U.S. is so expensive. In part, that’s because almost everything we knew came from analysis of Medicare data. Medicare covers about 16% of the population, primarily people over 65. The world of the privately insured has been a big black box, but about 60% of the country gets their coverage from private insurers and they are under 65.

ZACK COOPER FEBRUARY 12, 2016

https://insights.som.yale.edu/insights/why-is-healthcare-so-expensive

Can We Adapt to Climate Change?AUGUST 03, 2017

The rippling impacts of climate change are hitting businesses, governments, and society. Global Network experts offer assessments of some of the key systemic risks and challenges across geography and level of economic development.
https://insights.som.yale.edu/insights/can-we-adapt-to-climate-change

Can Social Enterprise Power Africa?

Two out of every three people in sub-Saharan Africa don’t have access to reliable power. Infrastructure costs put a traditional power grid out of reach for remote communities, but cheap solar home systems can transform people’s lives. Nate Heller ’09 explains the innovations that allow his social impact company to bring solar power to West Africa.
NATE HELLER 
 

Can Blockchain Become the Infrastructure of Financial Services?

Blockchain software is best known for its role in creating bitcoin, but the distributed ledger technology could have an much larger impact as a secure, nearly frictionless replacement for the slow, expensive, arcane financial services infrastructure. Digital Asset’s CEO Blythe Masters sees a chance for that in the near future. 


BLYTHE MASTERS 
 

How Do Leaders Foster Engagement and Creativity?

Workers aren’t widgets. Companies need employees who are more than three-dimensional versions of their job descriptions. Research has shown that companies are efficient and effective when a proactive, flexible, fill-in-where-there’s-a-need ethos of “organizational citizenship” is the norm. That works best when employees can go above and beyond in ways that are intrinsically meaningful to them, according to the Harvard Business Review.
So how do leaders foster a culture where workers show engagement, initiative, and creativity? Yale Insights consulted with Yale SOM’s Heidi Brooks for guidance on techniques that bring excitement, engagement, and meaning to the workplace.
HEIDI BROOKS 
 

What’s the Future of Work?

The robots are coming! A Pew Research Center survey found that 72% of Americans are concerned about robots and computers taking jobs currently done by humans—though just 2% report having actually lost a job to automation.
In a conversation with Yale Insights last year, Yale SOM labor economist Lisa Kahn said that the effects of automation are already being felt throughout the economy. In fact, the Great Recession likely accelerated the process, both by slowing demand, giving firms a chance to retool without losing sales, and by providing an excuse to lay off unproductive workers.
“We have seen the influences of automation in almost every pocket of the labor market, from the very low end of the skill spectrum to the very high end,” she said. “The future of labor essentially comes down to, where are computers going to replace us and where are computers going to augment us?”
JEFF SCHWARTZ  
 

What can you learn from Machiavelli?

The Prince was not even read by the person to whom it was dedicated, Lorenzo de Medici. If the truth be told, this strange little treatise for which Machiavelli is famous, or infamous, never aided—at least not in any systematic way—anyone in the actual business of governing. The most one can say about The Prince in this regard is that Kissinger and Nixon preferred it as their bedtime reading. 
So why are we still reading this treatise five centuries later?
ROBERT P. HARRISON
 

Can Better Teamwork Save Lives?

Poor coordination among members of a healthcare team can lead to higher costs and complications including death. By gathering and analyzing real-time data about how team members interact, Yale SOM’s Marissa King and her collaborators investigated whether a dedicated care coordinator can help improve outcomes—and in the process, learned just how delicate team dynamics can be.
MARISSA D. KING
 

Why the heck is there still an automotive chip shortage?

 A side from the raw, human toll,   COVID-19   has dramatically changed how we live, from travel and education to the way people work. This ...