Moving forward in the age of technology

This approach to higher production is now ineffective as disruptive technologies have changed the way industries operate.Our economy is not prepared to tackle the creative destruction that modern technology has caused by creating enormous wealth for innovators who have made technologies introduced a decade ago obsolete.

At the start of this century, creative destruction was restricted mostly to developed economies, but now it is impacting all the services and manufacturing sectors around the globe. Disruptive technologies wiped out the most established companies in the world. For instance, in 1997, Motorola was wiped out of the mobile phone market by Nokia, which introduced the analog technology. It was in turn routed by iOS and Android technologies creating thousands of new jobs while destroying 80 per cent of jobs in Nokia.

This destructive creation is now impacting developing economies, mostly in manufacturing industries. Modern, highly efficient machines employing much less labour and consuming low power are making life miserable for Pakistani textile mills that balanced and modernized their technologies 15 years back. A similar awkward situation was witnessed in the US in 1960 when large integrated steel mills were put out of business by more efficient mini steel mills.

Though large numbers of jobs were lost by the closure of integrated steel mills, the higher productivity of mini steel mills created new jobs elsewhere in the engineering sector. One thing that the modern destructive creation makes clear is that as the output increases in existing factories, new jobs will prop up from structural changes in employment. Fewer jobs in factories with high production would increase the need to hire more sales staff and strategies to dispose of the production surplus.

The flourishing industrial cluster of today, when disrupted by new technologies, could remain on top if planners analyze the shift in employer needs and start preparing its human resources on skills that are required in the market.

Human touch will remain an important tool of economic development even after the availability of most of the information through big data. Humans will continue to enjoy a comparative advantage in social intelligence and creativity. Planners in Pakistan should focus on enhancing these skills that complement computer technologies.

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