[Mb-civic] No Need to Feel Threatened - Sebastian Mallaby - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Apr 17 04:38:50 PDT 2006
No Need to Feel Threatened
<>
By Sebastian Mallaby
The Washington Post
Monday, April 17, 2006; A13
This week's visit from Chinese President Hu Jintao will inflame two
kinds of economic pessimism. The first holds that China is forcing a
race to the bottom: Its legions of poor workers are driving down U.S.
wages. The second claims that China is racing to the top: It's spending
ever more on science and engineering. Both sorts of pessimism are only
half right. Both miss the real source of U.S. economic dynamism.
It's true that American wages are stagnant and that they cry out for
progressive tax and social policies. But it's crazy to argue that
stagnant wages are the main explanation for the success of American
business. Just because Detroit's carmakers are fighting to cut union
benefits, it doesn't follow that constraining pay is the top issue for
most companies.
Consider a firm such as Wal-Mart, an alleged front-runner in the race to
the bottom. Wal-Mart's employees get market wages, otherwise they
wouldn't stay there. But even if its army of 1 million-plus hourly
workers got a 20 percent raise, that extra cost would wipe out only
about a third of Wal-Mart's 2005 profit. The retailer's success lies in
something other than low wages.
Likewise, it's true that China is striving to catch up in science,
hiring Western professors and pressing its researchers to publish in
international journals. But there is no straight-line connection between
scientific progress and economic advance. What matters is how companies
deploy technology. Americans are good at that.
Again, consider Wal-Mart. Its real genius lies in analyzing consumers
and foreseeing what they'll want; it can predict how many yellow
crew-neck T-shirts will sell in each region of the country, so it
doesn't waste gasoline delivering stocks to outlets that won't sell
them. Wal-Mart achieves this with the help of a data warehouse that
stores more information than all the fixed pages on the Internet
combined. It's rolling out a new generation of miniature devices that
attach to its goods, enabling it to computerize and track inventory.
What's true for Wal-Mart is also true for other companies: The most
striking business successes have little to do with low wages or pure
science. Google wouldn't be worth anything if it had only perfected
search technology; its business genius is that it's become an ad agency.
Mattel wouldn't be worth anything if it merely manufactured Barbies
using cheap Chinese workers; its triumph lies in design, advertising,
packaging -- and in those insidious deals that put Barbie on your
daughter's bike helmet. Or take an example that has almost no connection
whatsoever to technology or low pay. Starbucks has created one of the
world's least probable brands, turning a commodity crop into a
high-margin business.
Now consider the instructive case of DreamWorks. To create movies such
as "Shrek 2" and "Madagascar," DreamWorks brings together artists and
storytellers with software writers and even anatomy experts -- and
manages this cauldron of talent so well that it's created a new
benchmark for the industry. Innovation often springs from this
interdisciplinary fusion. It depends on neither low wages nor science.
It's not about a lone inventor in a lab. It's really about teamwork.
For one reason or another, American business excels at this. Our
much-maligned education system seems to encourage people to think across
categories and take risks. Our freewheeling and undeferential culture is
good for interdisciplinary cooperation. And then there is the role
played by U.S. business schools, which increasingly focus on the skills
that make this teamwork possible.
The Harvard MBA curriculum used to teach the nuts and bolts of
management, with an emphasis on accounting and financial skills. Now its
faculty aspires to teach "leadership." At Dartmouth's Tuck School of
Business, about half the grades are handed out for work that's done in
teams; members of each team provide one another with anonymous feedback,
and the school has hired counselors to help students absorb the lessons
from this criticism. "In the past, you could go through business school
and nobody would say you were coming across as a jerk," says Paul Danos,
dean of the Tuck School. "But that might have been the most important
factor in your future success as a manager."
China's spectacular rise causes understandable alarm, and it probably
has harmed pay for low-skilled U.S. workers. But the right answers to
stagnant wages include Head Start, school choice and a fix for the
regressive payroll tax; they should not include a national descent into
xenophobic paranoia. American business is in a golden phase right now
because its imaginative culture fits the challenges of the
post-industrial age. A low-wage economy that crams on science is not
going to take that away from us.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/16/AR2006041600860.html?nav=hcmodule
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