 Can our current form of capitalism support another half-century of American-led tech innovation? That’s one of the big questions I’ll be asking Michael Kratsios, the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman and the 500 other policymakers and CEOs attending Semafor World Economy in Washington next week. The US tech industry, which blossomed in Northern California after World War II and led to massive economic growth for decades, was the product of a different brand of capitalism than we see today. Back then, there were huge government investments in science and technology, many of them a result of the Cold War, and a rapidly expanding middle-class consumer. Venture capitalists made risky bets on tech companies founded by “traitorous” employees who thought they could do better than the big companies paying their salaries. It would have been impossible outside of California, where companies often lock up employees with noncompete agreements. The private sector innovation that resulted was unparalleled, but the government had a big hand in pushing it along, whether it was building the backbone of the internet, funding promising commercial areas like web browsers, creating special visas for employees, or tuning economic policy to benefit tech giants. Even the patent system was overhauled by the vision of Silicon Valley giants. The current AI wave is happening in a wholly different climate. Government is playing a smaller role. The private sector is making the risky bets on infrastructure that eclipses even the Apollo mission in size and scope. It’s a less hospitable environment for foreign workers, which means higher costs — and much less tech talent — for the world’s most cutting-edge companies. Meanwhile, economic transformation underway means the top 10% of earners are now responsible for nearly half of consumer spending, according to Moody’s Analytics, a reversal of the post-war middle class expansion. Will those seismic shifts translate into less innovation, or simply a different form of it? We’ll pose this question to Kratsios, who has advocated for a shakeup in how the US funds university research, as well as tech leaders like Michael Dell and Jack Clark. But if you have other questions — please send them my way — and I’ll report back here with answers when the hundreds of CEOs and world leaders are on their way back to the office. |