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Human Capital and the 1980 Game

by Dana Blankenhorn
May 17, 2019
in A-Clue, business models, business strategy, Current Affairs, e-commerce, economics, economy, futurism, history, investment, law, political philosophy, politics, Science, The 1979 Game, The 1980 Game, The Age of Trump
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Carter-in-a-sweaterIn 2020, we will be 12 years removed from the first political triumph of technology, the generational election of Barack Obama. All his progress is now being undone, much as a generation ago oil’s gains were threatened by Jimmy Carter and his cardigan sweater.

As we prepare to play the 1980 Game the question becomes, who is Ronald Reagan now? (It’s usually phrased, “Who Can Beat Trump?”) The answer lies in what drives our economy today, and in what drove it then.

I remain confident in the ultimate triumph of Democracy because, today, human capital is the gating factor to economic growth.


Reagan BushHuman capital doesn’t just mean people. It means smart people, trained minds, armed with the tools and incentives to think differently, free both to self-organize and find a market. The more smart, enthusiastic, imaginative minds a country can harness, the faster its economy grows.

This is not the way it was in 1980. At that time great wealth was defined by control over resources. Money came out of the ground.

In my parents’ time, in the 1940s, manufacturing created the greatest wealth. The arsenal of democracy conquered the world.

In my grandparents’ time, in the 1920s, it was infrastructure delivering predictable prices that was the gating factor to wealth. Stable prices for power, communication, and transport let Ford, RCA and General Mills win global markets.

In each of these eras, wealth drove American politics. Regulation came about in the early 20th century to assure growing manufacturers of stable prices. It broke down late in the century as control over resources, through capital and military force, became more important.

It is this late 20th century order of guns, capital and control that is being challenged in our time. The first challenge came in the market, now ruled by Cloud Czars like Google, Amazon and Microsoft. The political challenge is inevitable, and irresistible.

Google guysThe cloud, devices, space, the biological frontier, all these industries have enormous demand for smart, motivated imaginations. Only teams of minds, free to work together, can push out the boundaries of science, or quickly engineer science into solutions that work. It takes minds to turn ideas into companies, minds to sell those ideas in the market, and minds to organize the marketplace of ideas.

Minds create wealth.

Freedom powers the best minds. Ordered liberty is necessary for the work of great minds to succeed in the market.

The final balance of order and liberty is yet to be determined. This is what is at stake in the world today.

Xi_Jinping_October_2013_(cropped) (1)China’s system is built on order. People tolerate it because their parents have seen excruciating poverty in their own time. What happens as those parents age? The test of China’s system is coming.

The American system is based on liberty. Democracy and capitalism create flexibility. They let societies change their minds.

An economy based on resources doesn’t need liberty. It can keep things from getting done. Economies built on resources over the last 40 years – in Arabia, in Russia, even in Texas — are built on top-down order, not on ordered liberty. They require control over vast amounts of capital, vast armies of people, and vast tracts of land.

The political question of our time is whether this obsolete economic model will control our political model, at the expense of technology and biology.

For now, China’s system of order works for them. Handing out freedom with an eye dropper makes it precious. It can be channeled into producing higher living standards. It has brought China, in one generation, through 200 years of American economic history, from the age of small farms through the age of great industries into the world of clouds and devices.

Satya nadellaAmerican technology can’t compete with China in the coming decade if our minds are shackled, and if we can’t import new minds to cover the gaps. That’s the economic reality behind the politics. Trump and his resource-based friends openly defy this in the name of continuing their political power. Either they yield, or this country does.

Technology’s demands for 2020 are modest. They want more elite education, so the best minds can be trained to do their thing. They want decent immigration policies, so that people can be brought in to fill the gaps.

Fortunately for the Democratic Party, the Trump Party absolutely rejects both these demands.

Benioff and romettyThere is some dangerous give in terms of “charter schools” that may be run, sometimes, by educators instead of religious fanatics. There is support among Trumpists for importing people who are already rich or accomplished. For some short-sighted and greedy technologists this is enough. For the statesmen at the top of the stack, who already have all they want and look at the world with historical perspective, it’s not enough.

Politics is why some tech titans have been buying elite media companies. Having destroyed the business model built on content and context, in favor of one built on data and audience control, people like Jeff Bezos, Laurene Jobs and Marc Benioff (left) are putting media brands under their political patronage to drive elite thought their way.

Fox News Radio LogoBut resource politics got to this game first. Fox News, Sinclair Broadcasting and others have long seen media as a method for spinning truth and hiding uncomfortable facts, creating majorities that will follow them right into feudalism, the political model under which resources do best.

Most of what you’re going to read and hear over the next 18 months will be noise. It’s the struggle between a massive supply of trained, enthusiastic minds on one side, against a feudalism that gives China the whole board, that will define the politics of 2020.

Once technology makes its choice among the various Democrats, it will be game on.

My guess remains that Kamala Harris is the favorite. She is like George Bush in 1980. She’s in the center of the new Democratic consensus. She wants law and order to control the strong as well as the weak. She’s from the Bay Area, the beating heart of technology. Her life story as the American-born daughter of a Jamaican man and an Indian intellectual is compelling.

Kamala harrisBut George Bush wasn’t the 1980 Republican Presidential nominee. A Biden-Harris ticket may be what we’re looking at, if the Obama Thesis of Consensus, which I first wrote about a decade ago, remains strong enough within the party to beat calls for more fundamental change.

A Biden-Harris Administration, run by people from Harris’ “tech mafia,” could be the answer to the questions asked by the 1980 Game.

Tags: 2020 electionCloud CzarsdemocracyDemocratsDonald Trumpeconomic growthgating factorsGooglehuman capitalJoe BidenKamala Harrispoliticstechnologytechnology politics
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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I'm Dana Blankenhorn. I have covered the Internet as a reporter since 1983. I've been a professional business reporter since 1978, and a writer all my life.

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