Between the 1960s and the 1980s, American writer Alvin Toffler wrote about a “post- industrial future” and the “Information Age.” For the past 40 years, a quiet revolution has been sweeping ahead, carried by a wave of new technology. The bursting of the dot-com bubble in 2000 momentarily reopened the debate on the challenges and risks created by the new economy, but e-business was never really under threat. In this context, several economists, including Carol Corrado and Dan Sichel of the US Federal Reserve Board and Charles Hulten of the University of Maryland, met during the Conference on Research in Income and Wealth to think about how to measure the types of investment that people were making in the new economy.
Investment used to be mainly tangible, something you could touch, such as machinery, buildings, land, commodities, vehicles, industrial and precious metals and minerals to name a few. Over the past few decades, there has been a continuous shift from tangible to intangible investments in knowledge-related products like software, research and development, design, artistic originals, market research, training and new business processes.
The Microsoft Corporation is a case in point. In 2006, it was the world’s top company with a market value of $250 billion. However, its assets reached $70 billion, $60 billion of which consisted of cash and financial instruments. The traditional assets, such as plants and equipment, consisted of just $3 billion.
“Microsoft was a modern-day miracle. This was capitalism without capital,” write authors Jonathan Haskel and Stian Westlake.
Hulten poured over Microsoft’s accounts to explain why its market value was so high when its tangible assets, such as machinery, buildings and land, totaled only one percent of its value. He identified a number of intangible assets, such as Microsoft’s investments in research and development and product design, the value of its brands, its supply chains and internal structures, which did not show on the company balance sheets. This happens because accountants and statisticians tend not to count intangible spending as an investment, but as day-to-day expenses.
Just as the idea of investing in intangibles was attracting growing attention, a crisis in the subprime market began in 2007 in the US and developed into a full-blown international banking crisis followed by a recession. Despite an often-biased debate about the digital economy, intangible investment continued to grow and in some countries.
One of the main reasons behind the inevitable rise of intangible investment is due to the continuous availability of new digital technologies on the market, which encourages businesses to invest in intangibles. “Because many intangibles involve information and communication, they can almost, by definition, be made more efficient with better IT. Think of Uber’s organizational investment in building its vast networks of drivers — it would have been theoretically possible before the invention of computers and smartphones (after all, radio cab networks existed), but the return on the investment was massively increased by smartphones, with their ability to connect people quickly and enable the rating of drivers and the metering of rides,” explain the authors.
Another explanation for the rise in intangible investment is that developed countries’ output has changed, many regions are moving away from manufacturing, investing instead in Information’s Technology.
I found the discussion about intangibles and the rise of inequality particularly engaging. Haskel and Westlake refer to Thomas Piketty’s brilliant analysis of “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” in which he mentions that in the past decades, the rich have been getting richer and the poor have been getting poorer “and other dimensions of inequality have become more salient: Inequalities between generations, between different places and between elites and those who feel alienated and disrespected by modern society.”
The incomes of the richest one percent have increased sharply in many countries. But the traditional working class in developed countries has not been doing well. The continuous surge of new technologies is causing wages to fall and profits to rise. However, computers are neither replacing the high-paid workers, nor the low-paid. It is the middle-income jobs that are targeted and terminated.
Market reforms in China and India have enabled 2.93 billion workers to enter the global market and this has affected the livelihood of the workers making the same kinds of goods in developed countries. Consequently, the developing world has experienced rising prosperity whereas the working classes in developed countries have either lost their jobs or received lower wages.
Piketty, however, reminds us that that inequality is not only about income but also about wealth. Intangibles have driven property prices up. “In a world where intangibles are becoming more abundant…We would expect businesses and their employees to want to locate in diverse, growing cities where synergies and spillovers abound. One possible result of this would be to encourage people to build more houses and offices in big cities. But, of course, in most cities there are regulatory barriers to building…So instead, the price of housing rises and the wealthy, who are more likely to own this kind of real estate, get wealthier,” write the authors.
Finally, the book details a growing sense that in the US and Europe the population is divided in two halves, which became clearly visible during the US elections, the Brexit referendum and France’s recent presidential election. One half is cosmopolitan, educated and liberal while the other is skeptical of the elites’ opinions. People who do well in an intangible society, according to research psychologists, are more open to new experiences and are better at making connections, moreover, their sense of innovation and creativity interacts with the city’s unique flow of opportunities. An intangible economy thrives in a city where people meet each other and interact. The authors warn us that an effective intangible economy can give rise to forms of inequality, threaten social capital and create powerful firms with a strong interest in protecting their contested intangible assets. However, the countries that find a solution to these problems will open a path toward economic success. Policymakers who implement “strategies that encourage intangible investment are more likely to ensure prosperity than those that go against it,” the authors write in this fascinating book.
Book Review: Why intangible investments are so important today
Book Review: Why intangible investments are so important today
What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Atlas of Birds’ by Mike Unwin
“The Atlas of Birds” captures the breathtaking diversity of birds, and illuminates their conservation status around the world.
Full-color maps show where birds are found, both by country and terrain, and reveal how an astounding variety of behavioral adaptations—from flight and feeding to nest building and song—have enabled them to thrive in virtually every habitat on Earth.
Maps of individual journeys and global flyways chart the amazing phenomenon of bird migration, while bird classification is explained using maps for each order and many key families.
What We Are Reading Today: ‘When the Bombs Stopped’
- Fifty years after the last sortie, residents of rural Cambodia are still coping with the unexploded ordnance that covers their land
Author: ERIN LIN
Over the course of the Vietnam War, the United States dropped 500,000 tonnes of bombs over Cambodia—more than the combined weight of every man, woman, and child in the country.
What began as a secret CIA infiltration of Laos eventually expanded into Cambodia and escalated into a nine-year war over the Ho Chi Minh trail fought primarily with bombs.
Fifty years after the last sortie, residents of rural Cambodia are still coping with the unexploded ordnance that covers their land. In “When the Bombs Stopped,” Erin Lin investigates the consequences of the US bombing campaign across post conflict Cambodia.
What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Spike’ by Mark Humphries
We see the last cookie in the box and think, can I take that? We reach a hand out. In the 2.1 seconds that this impulse travels through our brain, billions of neurons communicate with one another, sending blips of voltage through our sensory and motor regions.
Neuroscientists call these blips “spikes.” Spikes enable us to do everything: talk, eat, run, see, plan, and decide. In “The Spike,” Mark Humphries takes readers on the epic journey of a spike through a single, brief reaction.
What We Are Reading Today: ‘Lost Souls’ by Sheila Fitzpatrick
When World War II ended, about 1 million people whom the Soviet Union claimed as its citizens were outside the borders of the USSR, mostly in the Western-occupied zones of Germany and Austria.
These “displaced persons,” or DPs—Russians, prewar Soviet citizens, and people from West Ukraine and the Baltic states forcibly incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1939—refused to repatriate to the Soviet Union despite its demands.
Thus began one of the first big conflicts of the Cold War. In “Lost Souls,” Sheila Fitzpatrick draws on new archival research, including Soviet interviews with hundreds of DPs, to offer a vivid account of this crisis, from the competitive maneuverings of politicians and diplomats to the everyday lives of DPs.
What We Are Reading Today: Leibniz in His World: The Making of a Savant
- Drawing on extensive correspondence by Leibniz and many leading figures of the age, Audrey Borowski paints a nuanced portrait of Leibniz in the 1670s, during his “Paris sojourn” as a young diplomat
Author: Audrey Borowski
Described by Voltaire as “perhaps a man of the most universal learning in Europe,” Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716) is often portrayed as a rationalist and philosopher who was wholly detached from the worldly concerns of his fellow men. Leibniz in His World provides a groundbreaking reassessment of Leibniz, telling the story of his trials and tribulations as an aspiring scientist and courtier navigating the learned and courtly circles of early modern Europe and the Republic of Letters.
Drawing on extensive correspondence by Leibniz and many leading figures of the age, Audrey Borowski paints a nuanced portrait of Leibniz in the 1670s, during his “Paris sojourn” as a young diplomat and in Germany at the court of Duke Johann Friedrich of Hanover. She challenges the image of Leibniz as an isolated genius, revealing instead a man of multiple identities whose thought was shaped by a deep engagement with the social and intellectual milieus of his time. Borowski shows us Leibniz as he was known to his contemporaries, enabling us to rediscover him as an enigmatic young man who was complex and all too human.