When it comes to economic growth, why are some countries and companies better than others?
While many experts look to factors in geography, finance, or psychology for the answers, César Hidalgo asks us to look instead at information and networks. Cesar is the author of the book, Why Information Grows: The Evolution of Order, from Atoms to Economies. He is also an Associate Professor of Media Arts & Sciences at the MIT Media Lab, where he leads the Collective Learning Group.
Cesar wants us to think about the amount of knowledge and knowhow people accumulate and the kinds of organizations where this information is stored. He and his team work on collective learning — that is, the learning of teams, organizations, cities, and nations. And he wants us to understand why building these kinds of networks and organizations can be challenging.
In this interview we discuss:
What it means to describe the objects around us as crystallized imagination
What distinguishes wealth from income and why it matters
Why the challenges of economic growth are tied to the challenges of learning in individuals and teams
Why individual skills, knowledge, and ability do not scale well and how this impacts economic growth
Why group or team knowledge trumps individual knowledge
Why it is not about knowing what needs to be done but about creating a team of people who have the knowledge and knowhow to do it
Why we can view products as alternative channels of communication in that they endow us with their knowledge -- we cannot build a phone but we can communicate with one or we cannot build a plane but we can be transported by one
Our capacity as individuals is augmented and expanded by the products and tools we have access to, from running water to smartphones -- channels of knowledge and comfort are transmitted through products
Economies are amplifiers of our knowledge and knowhow -- just look at how few people make toothpaste yet how many use it
Our ability to create products is limited by our knowledge and knowhow which is influenced by our social networks
How learning from experts, through experience, helps us learn and get better faster
The key differences between knowledge and knowhow and how this influences economic growth
How Ford Motor Company in 1928 experienced the challenges of transporting knowledge and knowhow through their failed experiment in Brazil called Fordlandia
The importance of asking, what are the channels that drive collective learning?
Episode Links
@cesifoti
http://www.chidalgo.com/ where you can find all the data tools her mentions in the podcast
Pep Guardiola
Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus by Doug Rushkoff
Wernher von Braun
Fordlandia
Ricardian Trade Theory
Steven Pinker
Richard Dawkins
Jonathan Haidt
Joseph Henrich
Kurt Vonnegut
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