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Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium (2005)

Chapter: Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson

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Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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Concluding Remarks

Dale W. Jorgenson

Harvard University


Thanking the panelists, Dr. Jorgenson proposed to answer a pair of questions that he had raised at the opening of the conference. He restated his first question thus: “Could we measure progress in the computer industry and had we done it?” Answering both parts in the affirmative, he said it had been demonstrated not only that measuring progress was possible but also that such measurement had become steadily more sophisticated and, in fact, “quite successful.”

The second question was whether it would be possible to use a road map resembling that maintained by the Semiconductor Industry Association to project developments in information technology generally and in the various fields discussed by the day’s presenters specifically. Again Dr. Jorgenson answered in the affirmative, although he cautioned that the institutional framework required could in some instances demand “a good deal of thought.” As evidence for his position, he pointed out that the road map for display devices described by Dr. Keys, which the U.S. Display Consortium had published only a few weeks prior to the meeting, had been modeled on the semiconductor industry’s road map. Printing and storage devices were other areas in which establishing road maps “clearly would be feasible,” he stated, and another was computers, although this last case was one of those in which the institutional framework would be of some concern. “Those are only the questions that I posed at the outset,” Dr. Jorgenson said, “so I’m very happy with the outcome of the symposium. I think we made a lot of

Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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progress on these questions and filled in a lot of the missing pieces of information.”

Looking to the future, he urged optimism on his listeners as “a good posture in general in research” while also presenting reasons for his own, personal optimism. Dr. Triplett, he reminded the audience, had described the history of research on computer prices—“the economist’s way of encompassing all these technical developments that we’ve been here to describe”—going back to the beginning of the computer’s commercial history in the 1950s. A set of measures for computers and peripherals, grounded in work that IBM researchers began publishing in the economics literature in the late 1960s, achieved incorporation into the U.S. national accounts for the first time in the mid-1980s and had continued in use, while also being enhanced and developed, to the present day. These measures had been extremely informative, especially in helping to understand the recent behavior of the economy.

Only the month before, Dr. Jorgenson said, Dr. Corrado had sent him the Federal Reserve Board of Governors’ first cut at a set of official statistics for telecommunications equipment, which had been intended to fill in what had up to then been “a ‘black hole’ in economic understanding.” Economists, for example, had not previously understood the role of DWDM, a very rapidly developing technology, but it had now been encompassed. While assuring the audience that the Board of Governors’ work would be enhanced and improved as better data became available, Dr. Jorgenson likened the effort to “the beginning draft of the human genome: It’s not the thing that you really wanted at the end of the day, but on the other hand it’s where you want to start.”

Finally, Dr. Jorgenson came to what he characterized as “the great challenge of software.” The software industry had been growing at more or less the same rate as the hardware industry since the beginning of the computer’s commercialization, he noted, but employment in the production of software had been growing about 10 times as fast. “There’s something there that we don’t fully understand,” he admitted, but he predicted: “The challenge of dealing with the issues having to do with software, although it lies ahead of us, will yield to methodologies similar to the ones that we were discussing today.”

Dr. Jorgenson again expressed his gratitude to all in attendance, and especially to the presenters and panelists, for taking part in what he called “this very fulsome discussion of a very important topic.” The STEP Board was planning more meetings in its series “Measuring and Sustaining the New Economy,” with the next one to focus on telecom, aided by the recent work of Dr. Corrado and her colleagues, and the one following that on software. Encouraging his listeners to “stay tuned,” Dr. Jorgenson said he looked forward to their participation in this continuing discussion.

Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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Suggested Citation:"Concluding Remarks--Dale W. Jorgenson." National Research Council. 2005. Deconstructing the Computer: Report of a Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11457.
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Next: II RESEARCH PAPER: Performance Measures for Computers--Jack E. Triplett »
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Starting in the mid 1990s, the United States economy experienced an unprecedented upsurge in economic productivity. Rapid technological change in communications, computing, and information management continue to promise further gains in productivity, a phenomenon often referred to as the New Economy. To better understand this phenomenon, the National Academies Board on Science, Technology, and Economic Policy (STEP) has convened a series of workshops and commissioned papers on Measuring and Sustaining the New Economy.

This major workshop, entitled Deconstructing the Computer, brought together leading industrialists and academic researchers to explore the contribution of the different components of computers to improved price-performance and quality of information systems. The objective was to help understand the sources of the remarkable growth of American productivity in the 1990s, the relative contributions of computers and their underlying components, and the evolution and future contributions of the technologies supporting this positive economic performance.

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