Comment by cynicalpeace

19 hours ago

Productivity metrics were better when businesses were run on just pen and paper. Of course, there could be many confounding factors, but there are also many reasons why this could be so. Just a few hypotheses:

- Pen and paper become a limiting factor on bureaucratic BS

- Pen and paper are less distracting

- Pen and paper require more creative output from the user, as opposed to screens which are mostly consumptive

etc etc

> Productivity metrics were better when businesses were run on just pen and paper

What metrics are these?

  • Productivity growth. If you take rolling averages from this chart, it clearly demonstrate higher productivity growth before the adoption of software. This is a well established fact in econ circles.

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1V79f

    • I think this is a classic case of reading into specific arguments too deeply without understanding what they really mean in the grand picture. Few points to easily disprove this argument

      - if it were true that software paradoxically reduces productivity, you can just start a competing company that doesn't use software. Obviously this is ridiculous - top 20 companies by market cap are mostly Software based. Every other non IT company is heavily invested in software

      - if you might say the problem is it at the country level, it is obvious that every country that has digitised has had higher productivity and GDP growth. Take Italy vs USA for instance.

      - if you are saying that the problem is even more global, take the whole world - the GDP per is still pretty high since the IT revolution (and so have other metrics)

      If you still think there's something more to it, you are probably deep in some conspiracy rabbit hole

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