Software, and Eisenhower's Interstate.
President Eisenhower started the Interstate and Defense highway system in 1956. Many have credited this system with providing a solid foundation of which the U.S. economy has grown. In 2006 President Bush noted:
Today, 50 years after the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 was signed, the Eisenhower Interstate System has made our society the most mobile in the world and contributed to the continuing growth of our economy.Progressive governments have always had a role in developing the infrastructure for their societies to prosper. This has established a clear line of separation between what is a capital works and private activities.
Today our economies are globalized and very sophisticated. The dependency on others to provide for our needs has never been greater. Most people would agree that the ability to survive on their own for the long term is not a skill that has been developed. Our dependence on one another has never been so great, and therefore, fragile.
I've been harping on a theme in this blog since the Preliminary Research Report was published. Suggesting that SAP is the bureaucracy and the heightened role of software in the oil and gas industry. At times I have felt that this message is not well received, and I attribute that to the Y2K fiasco. Y2K has made software, and the people in the technology business, less influential. Leading to what I would suggest is a patent disregard for the value and significance of the technologies.
I am only realizing myself why this is the wrong point of view for society to have taken. So many of our organizations are failing that we are unable to achieve the reliability that we had achieved and expected in the last 50 years. On Wednesday, I showed up at my regular Starbucks and asked for my usual Venti Mild coffee. They said they were out of coffee. Dumbfounded I said what and struggled to keep myself from waking too quickly.
The concern that I have is these events are happening too frequently to be a random or isolated event. The systems that we have grown to expect are in a state of failure that will only expand as the organizations that we depend upon face one financial Tsunami after another. We need to address these points by building the systems that are replacements to the current systems that are failing. Otherwise we are faced with the prospect of using our survival skills to make due.
The sense of urgency in which we approach the development of our replacement systems is accelerated by the storm clouds on the horizon. On Bloomberg this weekend I saw this commentary that in the day to day of the past fifty years we could never have imagined. Entitled "The Shipping News Suggests World Economy is Toast". Chronicling the slowdown at Volvo, the second largest truck manufacturer in the world, in the third quarter. In the third quarter of 2007 Volvo received 41,970 heavy trucks orders . In 2008 the number was 155. The article also documents how the shipping industries Baltic Dry Index has collapsed. Rendering revenues for ships at 10% of normal. These events were probably triggered way back in August 2007 at the beginning of the market problems.
This is after the world has pumped unknown trillions of dollars to prop up the systems. We need to start concentrating on these types of issues. Or the food and other necessities on those ships will never make it to the consumers that need them. This is a warning sign of bad things to come and we need to heed the call.
The Eisenhower administration was not faced with these dire situations in 1956. Peace had broken out and the depression had subsided from immediate memory. The role of government is to ensure that the systems and infrastructure are able to meet the needs of its people. That is why the governments, in addition to providing liquidity and interest rate relief should fund industry supporting software development projects.
The role of government has been discussed many times in Professor Carlota Perez' papers. In her Strategy + Business "Thought Leader" interview she stated:
Government needs to be reinvented, using as much imagination as it took to design the welfare state in the first place. It all seems impossible now, but things always seem impossible at this point in the surge. p. 7Governments need to be involved in the financing of software development projects such as People, Ideas & Objects. Providing the software that enables local economies to function may be the new dividing line between have and have not.
Because left to itself, it might not happen. Historical regularities are not a blueprint; they only indicate likelihood. We are at the crossroads right now. It is our responsibility to make sure that the enormous growth potential of the next golden age will not be lost. p. 7We have a choice, be constrained by our current organizations and their poor performance, regress to manual systems and barbarianism, or build the software for tomorrow's organization today. Join me here.
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