New York Times op-ed columnist and author Thomas L. Friedman recently wrapped up a week-long trip to India, where he met with business executives, government ministers and other officials, entrepreneurs and development groups. Even as Indiaâs economy has slowed considerably, Mr. Friedman remains a big believer in what he calls the âmiracle of India.ââ
Earlier we asked India Ink readers for their questions for Mr. Friedman about Indiaâs changing role in the world economy. Here are his answers to a select few:
By far the most popular reader question was: Is the world still flat
I wrote the âWorld Is Flatâ in 2004.
I have to confess, I now realize the book was wrong. The world is so much flatter than I thought.
When I wrote âThe World Is Flat,â Facebook didnât exist, Twitter was still a sound, the cloud was still in the sky, 4G was a parking place, LinkedIn was a prison, applications were what you sent to college, Big Data was a rap star and Skype was a typo. All of that came after I wrote âThe World Is Flat.â
And so what it tells you is all those trends have actually taken us from a connected world to what weâre now in, which is a hyper-connected world. Itâs a difference of degree. Itâs a difference in kind.
I believe it is changing every job, every industry and every market.
The trends I identified have only intensified in every direction, enabling individuals to complete, connect and! collaborate so much faster, farther cheaper and deeper.
Venkat from N. J. said: âThe globalization of business is basically finding a way to justify exploitation of labor,â resulting in an âenormous concentration of wealth in fewer hands.â The majority of âlabor working for low-end manufacturing work in pathetic conditions,â while workers in the U.S. face layoffs, particularly the elderly. âWho is paying for this social cost,âand should globalization be regulated, somehow
The first thing you need to understand about globalization is that it is everything and its opposite. So it is take it with one hand and give it with another hand.
On the one hand it is automating more things faster. On the other hand I met with young Indian entrepreneurs who are leveraging the cloud, open-source tools and very small amounts of capital, and are able to invent companies that can complete globally like never before.
So, who is th exploiter and who is the exploitee in this system If horses could vote, there never would have been cars.
What weâre getting here is rapid change. The question the reader raises, though, is a very important one, because something has changed which we have not figured out how to adjust to. This is a point that Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee make in their book âThe Race Against the Machine,â which I wrote my last column about.
The point they make is that over the last 200 hundred years, three things grew together: productivity, median income and employment. Whether you were an Indian or an American, productivity grew, median income grew and employment grew, and inequality tended to shrink.
Thatâs a good thing.
Once we hit the flattening of the world, and now the hyper-flattening of the world, those three things are splitting apart. And thatâs what ! the reade! r is, rightly, concerned about.
Iâm concerned about it too.
So what happens when the world gets this hyper-connected Well, first of all, the returns to education grow enormously. To be able to use these new technologies properly, you need to be educated.
In America today, unemployment for people with four-year college degrees is 3.6 percent, basically nothing. Unemployment for someone who dropped out of high school is now infinity. I exaggerate but you get the point.
Itâs called skills-bias polarization.
If you want to have a factory job in America today, doing high-end manufacturing, you need to know algebra and calculus. Itâs not just a repetitive motion any more, you need to program the robot.
Second thing is the returns to capital are so much more than the returns to labor. If I have a lot of capital and I can buy a lot of machines, the returns are so much more than if I hire a lot of people.
The third thing causing this phenomenon is in a hyper-connected orld, the returns to superstar talent are just staggering. If you are, say, Madonna, well, every Indian kid who has an iPad can now download your songs. That wasnât the case 10 years ago. You couldnât reach this market.
So all three of these things are creating much bigger income gaps, much lower employment for people with lower skills, yet much higher productivity and great wealth for owners of capital.
Thatâs the big change.
The challenge for every developed and developing society is how do you maintain a middle class in such a world. Thatâs what Iâm thinking about for the topic of my next book.
D.C. Agrawal from Princeton, New Jersey, asks: âHow would you rate India on governance and public institutional structures compared to other democratic countriesââ
Letâs look at the countries I visited in the last six months: India, China and Egypt. India in my mind has relatively weak governance in terms! of deliv! ering services, but a very strong civil society â" very vibrant active, social movements, whether itâs Anna Hazare or reaction to the rape case.
China has a very muscular government, in terms of delivering infrastructure and education, but a very weak civil society, although it is getting stronger. And Egypt has a very flabby, overweight government and a very weak civil society. Thatâs why when the government collapsed â" you got the Muslim Brotherhood taking advantage of the revolution, not strong-rooted democratic movements.
I think Indiaâs governance will improve. The government here is not utterly ineffective. It does do some things very well, but clearly it has weaknesses around policing, infrastructure building and providing consistent education. It holds elections very well, it does the census very well.
Letâs remember it is still a billion people. I donât want to be too hard on it, but people want more, they want better.
India today has, because of hyper-connectio of the world, and diffusion of technology, experienced the pushing down to lower and lower income levels more technology empowerment and education. Thatâs why India today seems like it has a 300 million-person middle class and a 300 million-person virtual middle class.
These are people who now have available to them, whether itâs a cell phone or other technologies, things that you would normally have to have a middle-class income to have. And they have access to certain learning opportunities.
So theyâre actually in their minds middle class, thinking like middle class and putting middle-class demands on the government. I think the young woman who was raped in this terrible tragedy was a member of that virtual middle class - the tools she had, what she was doing, expectations of the government.
Thatâs a big change. Itâs putting more pressure on the! governme! nt. And the government will eventually respond because it has to.
Jason Richardson-White from Bethlehem, Georgia, said: Studies indicate that equal treatment between the sexes is important to slowing the birth rate. I donât see that globalization is contributing significantly to that end in India. An argument can be made that globalization has made it possible for the people who are most likely to start egalitarian families to leave India for the West
First let me make a general response:
I did not invent globalization. I promise you. I just wrote about it.
I wrote about the upsides and the downsides. I didnât start it and I canât stop it. I have my own problems with it.
Having said that, I profile in my column an N.G.O. that is providing cell phone-based SMS messaging to alert women about their menstrual cycle, on when exactly they are fertile and when they should not be having unprotected sex, if they want to do faily planning.
This is totally based on cloud computing. Without globalization it doesnât exist. It allows a woman in a remote place to do this. Thereâs privacy to it. You do one interview on the phone to set it up.
People need to keep in mind, globalization giveth and globalization taketh. The biggest revolution about to hit India, in the next two years, is distance learning. Any woman from any village who knows English will be able to take courses from Harvard, Stanford and M.I.T.
Do you know what this means for women in conservative families, who donât want them to go to school Itâs going to be a revolution. Iâm very excited about the kind of educational empowerment that is going to be coming the way of Indian women that will give them greater earning power, greater control over their own bodies and greater ability to negotiate with their sexual partners.
Anand Kumar from Chicago, Illinois, asks: Tom, China may not be loved in the West, ! but is re! spected and admired for its accomplishments. How do you think India ranks on the loved vs. respected and admired spectrum
What an interesting question.
I think Indiaâs brand remains very strong around the world. I appreciate Indiaâs democracy.
What if 1 billion 50 million Indians were living like Syria today The whole world would be different. Literally, the whole world would feel different today.
So to me India is a miracle. One billion fifty million people holding free and fair elections, just about every day, in the country. We now take it for granted because it has gone on for so long. I think itâs amazing.
I canât generalize about the whole world, but Iâm still enormously optimistic about what I see here.
Zaigum Kashmiri from Clarence, New York, asks: Tom, I know you are an Indophile and write great things about India. But, honestly, how can anybody be hopeful about Indiaâs economic and social progres, keeping in view the lawlessness, dysfunctional government, corrupt police, a huge incompetent and corrupt bureaucracy and poverty
I think the important thing to always remember when you look at India is not the snapshot, but the slope of the change.
If you take a snapshot, those will be some of the things you see.
But if you came with me to my meeting with NASSCOM [National Association of Software and Services Companies, India's technology industry association] this week, youâd see eight young entrepreneurs leveraging the flat world to start global businesses that not only contribute to the world but that make Indians unpoor.
Theyâre amazing.
So you always have to keep these things in balance. What excites me most about India today is the trend line. Every time I come here, I see more and more Indians starting things, collaborating on things and! inventin! g things to make Indians unpoor. And to me thatâs the most important thing you have to keep in mind.
By the way, everything the reader cited there, you could say that about America. We have all that, plus guns.
No country is a paradise. Everyone is a work in progress. You have to think about where the thrust is.
Iâd like to think that with all our problems in America, weâre still tilted in a positive direction. Iâd like to say the same about India.
(Interview has been lightly edited and condensed.)
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