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New York Times: April 3, 2005
It's a Flat World, After All
[ Digging Deeper ]
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
In 1492 Christopher Columbus set sail for
India, going west. He had the Nina, the
Pinta and the Santa Maria. He never did find
India, but he called the people he met
''Indians'' and came home and reported to
his king and queen: ''The world is round.''
I set off for India 512 years later. I knew
just which direction I was going. I went
east. I had Lufthansa business class, and I
came home and reported only to my wife and
only in a whisper: ''The world is flat.''
And therein lies a tale of technology and
geoeconomics that is fundamentally reshaping
our lives -- much, much more quickly than
many people realize. It all happened while
we were sleeping, or rather while we were
focused on 9/11, the dot-com bust and Enron
-- which even prompted some to wonder
whether globalization was over. Actually,
just the opposite was true, which is why
it's time to wake up and prepare ourselves
for this flat world, because others already
are, and there is no time to waste.
I wish I could say I saw it all coming.
Alas, I encountered the flattening of the
world quite by accident. It was in late
February of last year, and I was visiting
the Indian high-tech capital, Bangalore,
working on a documentary for the Discovery
Times channel about outsourcing. In short
order, I interviewed Indian entrepreneurs
who wanted to prepare my taxes from
Bangalore, read my X-rays from Bangalore,
trace my lost luggage from Bangalore and
write my new software from Bangalore. The
longer I was there, the more upset I became
-- upset at the realization that while I had
been off covering the 9/11 wars,
globalization had entered a whole new phase,
and I had missed it. I guess the eureka
moment came on a visit to the campus of
Infosys Technologies, one of the crown
jewels of the Indian outsourcing and
software industry. Nandan Nilekani, the
Infosys C.E.O., was showing me his global
video-conference room, pointing with pride
to a wall-size flat-screen TV, which he said
was the biggest in Asia. Infosys, he
explained, could hold a virtual meeting of
the key players from its entire global
supply chain for any project at any time on
that supersize screen. So its American
designers could be on the screen speaking
with their Indian software writers and their
Asian manufacturers all at once. That's what
globalization is all about today, Nilekani
said. Above the screen there were eight
clocks that pretty well summed up the
Infosys workday: 24/7/365. The clocks were
labeled U.S. West, U.S. East, G.M.T., India,
Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia.
''Outsourcing is just one dimension of a
much more fundamental thing happening today
in the world,'' Nilekani explained. ''What
happened over the last years is that there
was a massive investment in technology,
especially in the bubble era, when hundreds
of millions of dollars were invested in
putting broadband connectivity around the
world, undersea cables, all those things.''
At the same time, he added, computers became
cheaper and dispersed all over the world,
and there was an explosion of e-mail
software, search engines like Google and
proprietary software that can chop up any
piece of work and send one part to Boston,
one part to Bangalore and one part to
Beijing, making it easy for anyone to do
remote development. When all of these things
suddenly came together around 2000, Nilekani
said, they ''created a platform where
intellectual work, intellectual capital,
could be delivered from anywhere. It could
be disaggregated, delivered, distributed,
produced and put back together again -- and
this gave a whole new degree of freedom to
the way we do work, especially work of an
intellectual nature. And what you are seeing
in Bangalore today is really the culmination
of all these things coming together.''
At one point, summing up the implications of
all this, Nilekani uttered a phrase that
rang in my ear. He said to me, ''Tom, the
playing field is being leveled.'' He meant
that countries like India were now able to
compete equally for global knowledge work as
never before -- and that America had better
get ready for this. As I left the Infosys
campus that evening and bounced along the
potholed road back to Bangalore, I kept
chewing on that phrase: ''The playing field
is being leveled.''
''What Nandan is saying,'' I thought, ''is
that the playing field is being flattened.
Flattened? Flattened? My God, he's telling
me the world is flat!''
Here I was in Bangalore -- more than 500
years after Columbus sailed over the
horizon, looking for a shorter route to
India using the rudimentary navigational
technologies of his day, and returned safely
to prove definitively that the world was
round -- and one of India's smartest
engineers, trained at his country's top
technical institute and backed by the most
modern technologies of his day, was telling
me that the world was flat, as flat as that
screen on which he can host a meeting of his
whole global supply chain. Even more
interesting, he was citing this development
as a new milestone in human progress and a
great opportunity for India and the world --
the fact that we had made our world flat!
This has been building for a long time.
Globalization 1.0 (1492 to 1800) shrank the
world from a size large to a size medium,
and the dynamic force in that era was
countries globalizing for resources and
imperial conquest. Globalization 2.0 (1800
to 2000) shrank the world from a size medium
to a size small, and it was spearheaded by
companies globalizing for markets and labor.
Globalization 3.0 (which started around
2000) is shrinking the world from a size
small to a size tiny and flattening the
playing field at the same time. And while
the dynamic force in Globalization 1.0 was
countries globalizing and the dynamic force
in Globalization 2.0 was companies
globalizing, the dynamic force in
Globalization 3.0 -- the thing that gives it
its unique character -- is individuals and
small groups globalizing. Individuals must,
and can, now ask: where do I fit into the
global competition and opportunities of the
day, and how can I, on my own, collaborate
with others globally? But Globalization 3.0
not only differs from the previous eras in
how it is shrinking and flattening the world
and in how it is empowering individuals. It
is also different in that Globalization 1.0
and 2.0 were driven primarily by European
and American companies and countries. But
going forward, this will be less and less
true. Globalization 3.0 is not only going to
be driven more by individuals but also by a
much more diverse -- non-Western, nonwhite
-- group of individuals. In Globalization
3.0, you are going to see every color of the
human rainbow take part.
''Today, the most profound thing to me is
the fact that a 14-year-old in Romania or
Bangalore or the Soviet Union or Vietnam has
all the information, all the tools, all the
software easily available to apply knowledge
however they want,'' said Marc Andreessen, a
co-founder of Netscape and creator of the
first commercial Internet browser. ''That is
why I am sure the next Napster is going to
come out of left field. As bioscience
becomes more computational and less about
wet labs and as all the genomic data becomes
easily available on the Internet, at some
point you will be able to design vaccines on
your laptop.''
Andreessen is touching on the most exciting
part of Globalization 3.0 and the flattening
of the world: the fact that we are now in
the process of connecting all the knowledge
pools in the world together. We've tasted
some of the downsides of that in the way
that Osama bin Laden has connected terrorist
knowledge pools together through his Qaeda
network, not to mention the work of teenage
hackers spinning off more and more lethal
computer viruses that affect us all. But the
upside is that by connecting all these
knowledge pools we are on the cusp of an
incredible new era of innovation, an era
that will be driven from left field and
right field, from West and East and from
North and South. Only 30 years ago, if you
had a choice of being born a B student in
Boston or a genius in Bangalore or Beijing,
you probably would have chosen Boston,
because a genius in Beijing or Bangalore
could not really take advantage of his or
her talent. They could not plug and play
globally. Not anymore. Not when the world is
flat, and anyone with smarts, access to
Google and a cheap wireless laptop can join
the innovation fray.
When the world is flat, you can innovate
without having to emigrate. This is going to
get interesting. We are about to see
creative destruction on steroids.
How did the world get flattened, and how did
it happen so fast?
It was a result of 10 events and forces that
all came together during the 1990's and
converged right around the year 2000. Let me
go through them briefly. The first event was
11/9. That's right -- not 9/11, but 11/9.
Nov. 9, 1989, is the day the Berlin Wall
came down, which was critically important
because it allowed us to think of the world
as a single space. ''The Berlin Wall was not
only a symbol of keeping people inside
Germany; it was a way of preventing a kind
of global view of our future,'' the Nobel
Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen said.
And the wall went down just as the windows
went up -- the breakthrough Microsoft
Windows 3.0 operating system, which helped
to flatten the playing field even more by
creating a global computer interface,
shipped six months after the wall fell.
The second key date was 8/9. Aug. 9, 1995,
is the day Netscape went public, which did
two important things. First, it brought the
Internet alive by giving us the browser to
display images and data stored on Web sites.
Second, the Netscape stock offering
triggered the dot-com boom, which triggered
the dot-com bubble, which triggered the
massive overinvestment of billions of
dollars in fiber-optic telecommunications
cable. That overinvestment, by companies
like Global Crossing, resulted in the
willy-nilly creation of a global
undersea-underground fiber network, which in
turn drove down the cost of transmitting
voices, data and images to practically zero,
which in turn accidentally made Boston,
Bangalore and Beijing next-door neighbors
overnight. In sum, what the Netscape
revolution did was bring people-to-people
connectivity to a whole new level. Suddenly
more people could connect with more other
people from more different places in more
different ways than ever before.
No country accidentally benefited more from
the Netscape moment than India. ''India had
no resources and no infrastructure,'' said
Dinakar Singh, one of the most respected
hedge-fund managers on Wall Street, whose
parents earned doctoral degrees in
biochemistry from the University of Delhi
before emigrating to America. ''It produced
people with quality and by quantity. But
many of them rotted on the docks of India
like vegetables. Only a relative few could
get on ships and get out. Not anymore,
because we built this ocean crosser, called
fiber-optic cable. For decades you had to
leave India to be a professional. Now you
can plug into the world from India. You
don't have to go to Yale and go to work for
Goldman Sachs.'' India could never have
afforded to pay for the bandwidth to connect
brainy India with high-tech America, so
American shareholders paid for it. Yes,
crazy overinvestment can be good. The
overinvestment in railroads turned out to be
a great boon for the American economy. ''But
the railroad overinvestment was confined to
your own country and so, too, were the
benefits,'' Singh said. In the case of the
digital railroads, ''it was the foreigners
who benefited.'' India got a free ride.
The first time this became apparent was when
thousands of Indian engineers were enlisted
to fix the Y2K -- the year 2000 -- computer
bugs for companies from all over the world.
(Y2K should be a national holiday in India.
Call it ''Indian Interdependence Day,'' says
Michael Mandelbaum, a foreign-policy analyst
at Johns Hopkins.) The fact that the Y2K
work could be outsourced to Indians was made
possible by the first two flatteners, along
with a third, which I call ''workflow.''
Workflow is shorthand for all the software
applications, standards and electronic
transmission pipes, like middleware, that
connected all those computers and
fiber-optic cable. To put it another way, if
the Netscape moment connected people to
people like never before, what the workflow
revolution did was connect applications to
applications so that people all over the
world could work together in manipulating
and shaping words, data and images on
computers like never before.
Indeed, this breakthrough in
people-to-people and
application-to-application connectivity
produced, in short order, six more
flatteners -- six new ways in which
individuals and companies could collaborate
on work and share knowledge. One was
''outsourcing.'' When my software
applications could connect seamlessly with
all of your applications, it meant that all
kinds of work -- from accounting to
software-writing -- could be digitized,
disaggregated and shifted to any place in
the world where it could be done better and
cheaper. The second was ''offshoring.'' I
send my whole factory from Canton, Ohio, to
Canton, China. The third was
''open-sourcing.'' I write the next
operating system, Linux, using engineers
collaborating together online and working
for free. The fourth was ''insourcing.'' I
let a company like UPS come inside my
company and take over my whole logistics
operation -- everything from filling my
orders online to delivering my goods to
repairing them for customers when they
break. (People have no idea what UPS really
does today. You'd be amazed!). The fifth was
''supply-chaining.'' This is Wal-Mart's
specialty. I create a global supply chain
down to the last atom of efficiency so that
if I sell an item in Arkansas, another is
immediately made in China. (If Wal-Mart were
a country, it would be China's
eighth-largest trading partner.) The last
new form of collaboration I call
''informing'' -- this is Google, Yahoo and
MSN Search, which now allow anyone to
collaborate with, and mine, unlimited data
all by themselves.
So the first three flatteners created the
new platform for collaboration, and the next
six are the new forms of collaboration that
flattened the world even more. The 10th
flattener I call ''the steroids,'' and these
are wireless access and voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP). What the steroids do is
turbocharge all these new forms of
collaboration, so you can now do any one of
them, from anywhere, with any device.
The world got flat when all 10 of these
flatteners converged around the year 2000.
This created a global, Web-enabled playing
field that allows for multiple forms of
collaboration on research and work in real
time, without regard to geography, distance
or, in the near future, even language. ''It
is the creation of this platform, with these
unique attributes, that is the truly
important sustainable breakthrough that made
what you call the flattening of the world
possible,'' said Craig Mundie, the chief
technical officer of Microsoft.
No, not everyone has access yet to this
platform, but it is open now to more people
in more places on more days in more ways
than anything like it in history. Wherever
you look today -- whether it is the world of
journalism, with bloggers bringing down Dan
Rather; the world of software, with the
Linux code writers working in online forums
for free to challenge Microsoft; or the
world of business, where Indian and Chinese
innovators are competing against and working
with some of the most advanced Western
multinationals -- hierarchies are being
flattened and value is being created less
and less within vertical silos and more and
more through horizontal collaboration within
companies, between companies and among
individuals.
Do you recall ''the IT revolution'' that the
business press has been pushing for the last
20 years? Sorry to tell you this, but that
was just the prologue. The last 20 years
were about forging, sharpening and
distributing all the new tools to
collaborate and connect. Now the real
information revolution is about to begin as
all the complementarities among these
collaborative tools start to converge. One
of those who first called this moment by its
real name was Carly Fiorina, the former
Hewlett-Packard C.E.O., who in 2004 began to
declare in her public speeches that the
dot-com boom and bust were just ''the end of
the beginning.'' The last 25 years in
technology, Fiorina said, have just been
''the warm-up act.'' Now we are going into
the main event, she said, ''and by the main
event, I mean an era in which technology
will truly transform every aspect of
business, of government, of society, of
life.''
As if this flattening wasn't enough, another
convergence coincidentally occurred during
the 1990's that was equally important. Some
three billion people who were out of the
game walked, and often ran, onto the playing
field. I am talking about the people of
China, India, Russia, Eastern Europe, Latin
America and Central Asia. Their economies
and political systems all opened up during
the course of the 1990's so that their
people were increasingly free to join the
free market. And when did these three
billion people converge with the new playing
field and the new business processes? Right
when it was being flattened, right when
millions of them could compete and
collaborate more equally, more horizontally
and with cheaper and more readily available
tools. Indeed, thanks to the flattening of
the world, many of these new entrants didn't
even have to leave home to participate.
Thanks to the 10 flatteners, the playing
field came to them!
It is this convergence -- of new players, on
a new playing field, developing new
processes for horizontal collaboration --
that I believe is the most important force
shaping global economics and politics in the
early 21st century. Sure, not all three
billion can collaborate and compete. In
fact, for most people the world is not yet
flat at all. But even if we're talking about
only 10 percent, that's 300 million people
-- about twice the size of the American work
force. And be advised: the Indians and
Chinese are not racing us to the bottom.
They are racing us to the top. What China's
leaders really want is that the next
generation of underwear and airplane wings
not just be ''made in China'' but also be
''designed in China.'' And that is where
things are heading. So in 30 years we will
have gone from ''sold in China'' to ''made
in China'' to ''designed in China'' to
''dreamed up in China'' -- or from China as
collaborator with the worldwide
manufacturers on nothing to China as a
low-cost, high-quality, hyperefficient
collaborator with worldwide manufacturers on
everything. Ditto India. Said Craig Barrett,
the C.E.O. of Intel, ''You don't bring three
billion people into the world economy
overnight without huge consequences,
especially from three societies'' -- like
India, China and Russia -- ''with rich
educational heritages.''
That is why there is nothing that guarantees
that Americans or Western Europeans will
continue leading the way. These new players
are stepping onto the playing field legacy
free, meaning that many of them were so far
behind that they can leap right into the new
technologies without having to worry about
all the sunken costs of old systems. It
means that they can move very fast to adopt
new, state-of-the-art technologies, which is
why there are already more cellphones in use
in China today than there are people in
America.
If you want to appreciate the sort of
challenge we are facing, let me share with
you two conversations. One was with some of
the Microsoft officials who were involved in
setting up Microsoft's research center in
Beijing, Microsoft Research Asia, which
opened in 1998 -- after Microsoft sent teams
to Chinese universities to administer I.Q.
tests in order to recruit the best brains
from China's 1.3 billion people. Out of the
2,000 top Chinese engineering and science
students tested, Microsoft hired 20. They
have a saying at Microsoft about their Asia
center, which captures the intensity of
competition it takes to win a job there and
explains why it is already the most
productive research team at Microsoft:
''Remember, in China, when you are one in a
million, there are 1,300 other people just
like you.''
The other is a conversation I had with
Rajesh Rao, a young Indian entrepreneur who
started an electronic-game company from
Bangalore, which today owns the rights to
Charlie Chaplin's image for mobile computer
games. ''We can't relax,'' Rao said. ''I
think in the case of the United States that
is what happened a bit. Please look at me: I
am from India. We have been at a very
different level before in terms of
technology and business. But once we saw we
had an infrastructure that made the world a
small place, we promptly tried to make the
best use of it. We saw there were so many
things we could do. We went ahead, and today
what we are seeing is a result of that.
There is no time to rest. That is gone.
There are dozens of people who are doing the
same thing you are doing, and they are
trying to do it better. It is like water in
a tray: you shake it, and it will find the
path of least resistance. That is what is
going to happen to so many jobs -- they will
go to that corner of the world where there
is the least resistance and the most
opportunity. If there is a skilled person in
Timbuktu, he will get work if he knows how
to access the rest of the world, which is
quite easy today. You can make a Web site
and have an e-mail address and you are up
and running. And if you are able to
demonstrate your work, using the same
infrastructure, and if people are
comfortable giving work to you and if you
are diligent and clean in your transactions,
then you are in business.''
Instead of complaining about outsourcing,
Rao said, Americans and Western Europeans
would ''be better off thinking about how you
can raise your bar and raise yourselves into
doing something better. Americans have
consistently led in innovation over the last
century. Americans whining -- we have never
seen that before.''
Rao is right. And it is time we got focused.
As a person who grew up during the cold war,
I'll always remember driving down the
highway and listening to the radio, when
suddenly the music would stop and a
grim-voiced announcer would come on the air
and say: ''This is a test. This station is
conducting a test of the Emergency Broadcast
System.'' And then there would be a
20-second high-pitched siren sound.
Fortunately, we never had to live through a
moment in the cold war when the announcer
came on and said, ''This is a not a test.''
That, however, is exactly what I want to say
here: ''This is not a test.''
The long-term opportunities and challenges
that the flattening of the world puts before
the United States are profound. Therefore,
our ability to get by doing things the way
we've been doing them -- which is to say not
always enriching our secret sauce -- will
not suffice any more. ''For a country as
wealthy we are, it is amazing how little we
are doing to enhance our natural
competitiveness,'' says Dinakar Singh, the
Indian-American hedge-fund manager. ''We are
in a world that has a system that now allows
convergence among many billions of people,
and we had better step back and figure out
what it means. It would be a nice
coincidence if all the things that were true
before were still true now, but there are
quite a few things you actually need to do
differently. You need to have a much more
thoughtful national discussion.''
If this moment has any parallel in recent
American history, it is the height of the
cold war, around 1957, when the Soviet Union
leapt ahead of America in the space race by
putting up the Sputnik satellite. The main
challenge then came from those who wanted to
put up walls; the main challenge to America
today comes from the fact that all the walls
are being taken down and many other people
can now compete and collaborate with us much
more directly. The main challenge in that
world was from those practicing extreme
Communism, namely Russia, China and North
Korea. The main challenge to America today
is from those practicing extreme capitalism,
namely China, India and South Korea. The
main objective in that era was building a
strong state, and the main objective in this
era is building strong individuals.
Meeting the challenges of flatism requires
as comprehensive, energetic and focused a
response as did meeting the challenge of
Communism. It requires a president who can
summon the nation to work harder, get
smarter, attract more young women and men to
science and engineering and build the
broadband infrastructure, portable pensions
and health care that will help every
American become more employable in an age in
which no one can guarantee you lifetime
employment.
We have been slow to rise to the challenge
of flatism, in contrast to Communism, maybe
because flatism doesn't involve ICBM
missiles aimed at our cities. Indeed, the
hot line, which used to connect the Kremlin
with the White House, has been replaced by
the help line, which connects everyone in
America to call centers in Bangalore. While
the other end of the hot line might have had
Leonid Brezhnev threatening nuclear war, the
other end of the help line just has a soft
voice eager to help you sort out your AOL
bill or collaborate with you on a new piece
of software. No, that voice has none of the
menace of Nikita Khrushchev pounding a shoe
on the table at the United Nations, and it
has none of the sinister snarl of the bad
guys in ''From Russia With Love.'' No, that
voice on the help line just has a friendly
Indian lilt that masks any sense of threat
or challenge. It simply says: ''Hello, my
name is Rajiv. Can I help you?''
No, Rajiv, actually you can't. When it comes
to responding to the challenges of the flat
world, there is no help line we can call. We
have to dig into ourselves. We in America
have all the basic economic and educational
tools to do that. But we have not been
improving those tools as much as we should.
That is why we are in what Shirley Ann
Jackson, the 2004 president of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science
and president of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, calls a ''quiet crisis'' -- one
that is slowly eating away at America's
scientific and engineering base.
''If left unchecked,'' said Jackson, the
first African-American woman to earn a Ph.D.
in physics from M.I.T., ''this could
challenge our pre-eminence and capacity to
innovate.'' And it is our ability to
constantly innovate new products, services
and companies that has been the source of
America's horn of plenty and steadily
widening middle class for the last two
centuries. This quiet crisis is a product of
three gaps now plaguing American society.
The first is an ''ambition gap.'' Compared
with the young, energetic Indians and
Chinese, too many Americans have gotten too
lazy. As David Rothkopf, a former official
in the Clinton Commerce Department, puts it,
''The real entitlement we need to get rid of
is our sense of entitlement.'' Second, we
have a serious numbers gap building. We are
not producing enough engineers and
scientists. We used to make up for that by
importing them from India and China, but in
a flat world, where people can now stay home
and compete with us, and in a post-9/11
world, where we are insanely keeping out
many of the first-round intellectual draft
choices in the world for exaggerated
security reasons, we can no longer cover the
gap. That's a key reason companies are
looking abroad. The numbers are not here.
And finally we are developing an education
gap. Here is the dirty little secret that no
C.E.O. wants to tell you: they are not just
outsourcing to save on salary. They are
doing it because they can often get
better-skilled and more productive people
than their American workers.
These are some of the reasons that Bill
Gates, the Microsoft chairman, warned the
governors' conference in a Feb. 26 speech
that American high-school education is
''obsolete.'' As Gates put it: ''When I
compare our high schools to what I see when
I'm traveling abroad, I am terrified for our
work force of tomorrow. In math and science,
our fourth graders are among the top
students in the world. By eighth grade,
they're in the middle of the pack. By 12th
grade, U.S. students are scoring near the
bottom of all industrialized nations. . . .
The percentage of a population with a
college degree is important, but so are
sheer numbers. In 2001, India graduated
almost a million more students from college
than the United States did. China graduates
twice as many students with bachelor's
degrees as the U.S., and they have six times
as many graduates majoring in engineering.
In the international competition to have the
biggest and best supply of knowledge
workers, America is falling behind.''
We need to get going immediately. It takes
15 years to train a good engineer, because,
ladies and gentlemen, this really is rocket
science. So parents, throw away the Game
Boy, turn off the television and get your
kids to work. There is no sugar-coating
this: in a flat world, every individual is
going to have to run a little faster if he
or she wants to advance his or her standard
of living. When I was growing up, my parents
used to say to me, ''Tom, finish your dinner
-- people in China are starving.'' But after
sailing to the edges of the flat world for a
year, I am now telling my own daughters,
''Girls, finish your homework -- people in
China and India are starving for your
jobs.''
I repeat, this is not a test. This is the
beginning of a crisis that won't remain
quiet for long. And as the Stanford
economist Paul Romer so rightly says, ''A
crisis is a terrible thing to waste.'' [
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