The story appears on

Page A7

October 18, 2016

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Opinion » Foreign Views

New revolution will change the way we live

NEW technologies are emerging so rapidly that we are now having trouble coping with their impact on society. By affecting everything from the nature of work to what it means to be human, technological changes could overwhelm us if we do not collaborate to understand and manage them.

Entire industries are being redefined and created from scratch, owing to groundbreaking developments in arti­ficial intelligence, robotics, the Internet of Things (the growing number of Inter­net-connected devices that can perceive their environment in some way, share data with one another and communi­cate with you), autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, nanotechnology, biotechnol­ogy, materials science, energy storage, and quantum computing.

We at the World Economic Forum have dubbed this wave of innovation the “Fourth Industrial Revolution,” because it is fundamentally changing the way we live, work, and relate to one another.

Technologies such as the steam en­gine and the cotton mill launched the First Industrial Revolution, which was accompanied by historic sociopolitical developments such as urbanization, mass education, and mechanized agri­culture. Thanks to electrification and mass production, the Second Industrial Revolution introduced entirely new so­cial models and forms of work. And with the advent of digital technology and instant telecommunications, the Third Industrial Revolution, playing out over the past five decades, has connected the planet and shrunk time and space.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution will be no less transformative: individual technologies will be influential, but changes in our social and economic sys­tems will do far more to shape our future lives. At this stage, there is no consensus on such basic issues as personal-data ownership, infrastructure security, and new disruptive businesses’ rights and responsibilities. What is needed is a conceptual framework to help busi­nesses, governments, and individuals to anticipate the radical technology-driven shifts — in business models, ethics, and social issues — on the horizon.

To ensure our future prosperity, we must ask ourselves if new technologies are being designed to meet social needs, or if they are simply ushering in change for its own sake. More generally, we must focus not just on technological progress and economic productivity, but also on how these forces are affecting people, communities, and the environment.

As the Fourth Industrial Revolution continues, four principles should guide our policies and their implementation. For a start, we should focus on systems rather than on any individual technol­ogy; only by observing how divergent technological, social, and economic forces interact with one another can we determine and predict how business, society, and economics may change.

Second, we should push back against the common fatalistic view that prog­ress is predetermined. Communities and individuals should be educated and empowered to master technologies for productive purposes, rather than being mastered by them for someone else’s ends. If we fail to harness new technologies for ourselves, we will have surrendered our personal and collec­tive agency, leaving little reason for optimism.

Third, we should design new tech­nologies and systems with the future in mind, rather than blindly accepting change as it comes. Integrating trans­formative technologies into our social and economic systems will require close collaboration between stakeholders in government, industry, and civil society. Otherwise, our future will be decided by default circumstances instead of our own collective judgment.

Finally, social and ethical consider­ations are not a bug to overcome or override; our shared values should be the central feature of all new technolo­gies. If technologies are being used in ways that exacerbate poverty, discrimi­nation, or environmental degradation, they have not been optimized for the future we want to build. Investments in new technologies are justifiable only if they contribute to a safer, more inte­grated world.

No single stakeholder can address the Fourth Industrial Revolution’s social and economic challenges. The business community, for its part, must create an environment in which technologies are developed and deployed safely, and with social considerations in mind.

Governments, too, must be actively engaged in how innovations are intro­duced to society. Policymakers should maintain close collaboration with the technologists and entrepreneurs lead­ing the revolution, lest they fall behind. And all of us, as individuals, must stay informed so that we can understand and take action on new issues that emerge from the complex interplay between technology and society.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution will usher in systemic changes that demand collaborative engagement, and we will need to consider new ways of working to­gether across public and private spheres. Because the pace of change will only con­tinue to accelerate, we must maintain transparency for all stakeholders so that they can weigh the risks and rewards of each new development.

We live in an age of complexity, and sound leadership calls for a wholesale shift in how we think about collabora­tive engagement for the future. If we are to avoid the dystopian outcomes that technology can easily produce, we must collectively envision the future that we want to create.

Klaus Schwab is Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum. Copyright: Project Syndicate.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend