Las Vegas Review-Journal

Facing the realities of a changing world Matthew Rooney

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In the first half of the 19th century, England began to industrial­ize. Rapid innovation led to strong economic growth and dramatic increases in output per worker, but for nearly 50 years, wages remained almost unchanged.

This gap in income and social opportunit­y — known as “Engels’ Pause” because it is the focus of an 1844 essay by Karl Marx’s intellectu­al partner Friedrich Engels — fueled the emergence of Marxism and contribute­d to the series of revolution­s, coups and civil conflicts that characteri­zed the second half of the century in England, France, Germany and other European countries.

Historical analogies can be misleading, but this gap between productivi­ty and wages is strikingly similar to the evolution of productivi­ty and wages in the United States over the past 40 years. The current level of income inequality has significan­t potential to destabiliz­e any democracy, as former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said during the George W. Bush Presidenti­al Center’s recent Forum on Leadership.

You can witness the effect of our modern age of rapid innovation and change in any number of ways. You can see it in the disruption that artificial intelligen­ce and robotics are having on once rock-solid economic models. And you can see it in the technologi­cal advances that allow scientists to edit genes to prevent heart disease and other congenital conditions.

These kinds of innovation, like the ones that drove early industrial­ization two centuries ago, are doing more than just introducin­g new products and eliminatin­g old ones, or opening new opportunit­ies to work and eliminatin­g old ones. They are changing the very nature of work, creating new relationsh­ips between worker and employer, and disrupting communitie­s as people move in search of opportunit­y.

This type of change is more profound than simple introducti­on of a new technology. A new economic paradigm like the one whose emergence we are witnessing ripples through society, changing power relationsh­ips, changing the nature of government, even touching relationsh­ips between men and women, parents and children, ethnic groups and faiths.

Moreover, as in Europe in the 19th century, these developmen­ts are rearrangin­g internatio­nal power relationsh­ips. China, for one, is emerging as an industrial power, and this is having disruptive effects on the United States and other advanced economies. India, Brazil, Nigeria and others are industrial­izing, which is creating new power relationsh­ips throughout the world. The stakes are high, given the implicatio­ns of Germany’s quest for a place among the great nations a century ago.

The rest of the story of Engels’ Pause is that the yawning gap between productivi­ty and wages that developed in the first half of the 19th century lessened in the second half, as education and training caught up and the labor force became more sophistica­ted and better adapted to the demands of the new technologi­es. By 1900, wages in England were again rising at the same pace as output per worker. But social and internatio­nal conflict continued for another half-century, as Germany, Russia, China and other countries grappled with their own “Engels’ Pauses.”

As an economist and — yes, as a globalist — I have a lot of confidence in the entreprene­urial spirit of Americans. I think we will find a new path to growth, upgrade our workforce’s skills, and ultimately the wage-productivi­ty gap will close.

I see harbingers of this outcome whenever I visit an innovative, nimble company applying new technologi­cal solutions to reducing costs and competing in an unforgivin­g global market. Or a university full of smart, vigorous people of all ages wrestling intelligen­tly with tough problems and, often in multiethni­c, -generation­al, -national and -gender teams, coming up with answers nobody expected.

But can we wait 50 years for our own Engels’ Pause to be overcome? Or are we condemned to repeat Europe’s experience of social and internatio­nal conflict?

We are a great and sovereign nation, and we hold our fate in our own hands. Smart policy that deals forthright­ly with the realities of the global market and geopolitic­s, that is driven by a vision that sees over the horizon of the moment, can make the difference. May we have the wherewitha­l to learn from the mistakes of the past.

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