Deftly attacking by logic and statistics the dominant pessimism
concerning future US economic and military power, Ross instead sees
greater progress over the next two or three decades than during the
last--a fifth rising phase of a Kondratiev cycle. The central force
will consist of a surging rate of technological advance resulting
from such innovations as the electronic computer in combination
with solid state application; energy-related superconductivity and
fusion; biotechnology and space; etc. . . .An excellent, sprightly,
and scholarly reply to recent doomsayers. "Choice"
This groundbreaking work challenges pessimistic views of the
U.S. economy, arguing instead that the U.S. is on the brink of a
radical economic and social transformation, primarily caused by
technological advance. According to Ross, the American economy,
like other market-oriented economies, is subject to long waves, or
cycles. In the early 1990s, he asserts, the U.S. economy will
experience the beginning of a rising phase of a long wave, with the
economy growing for two or three decades. The fundamental
underlying cause of the booming economy will be the momentum
associated with an unprecedented rate of technological advance; it
will be associated with an increase in the standard of living of
the average American beyond current expectations. Written in a
style accessible to both scholars and educated lay readers, A Gale
of Creative Destruction is an important counterweight to the recent
spate of books which posit the impending collapse of the U.S.
economy.
Ross takes a unique approach to the subject by integrating
structural change in the American economy with technological
advance in an international setting. To build his case, he analyzes
the historical long waves the U.S. economy has already seen and
examines the technological advances such as superconductivity and
biotechnology. He shows that such major innovations have coincided
with the rising phase of long waves. He also explores changes in
the workforce, the diminution of racial and gender discrimination,
the increasing interdependence of the world's economies, and the
tremendous strides being made toward more democratization and more
vibrant market-driven economies, arguing that each of these factors
will act to help fuel economic growth in the 1990s and beyond.
Based on his analysis, Ross concludes that optimism about the
economic future is more than warranted and that today's children
will be significantly better off than their parents.
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