Can Web3 60x The Global Economy?

In 2008, global GDP was roughly $50 trillion. It now comes in at $100 trillion. That means it took ~15 years for the global economy to double in size.

Is this a fantastic rate? How does that compare to the past? Are things accelerating or slowing down?

These are all questions that cause some debate.

A big part of this discussion is where things will go in the future. For all the talk of things getting worse, the reality is we are embarking upon a period which could cause another seismic shift in output. Is Web3 going to be the cause of this.

To give a TL:DR, it isn't. That said, it is going to be part of a process that does attain massive change.

Let us look at the economics of the next 100 years.


Source

Game Changers

For the sake of this article, we will refer to game changers. We are going to isolate this to 3 periods, two in the past and one upcoming.

These are massive shifts that altered all of humanity. Since we are only dealing with three, we can see how they are big. What is exciting is there is the possibility that some reading these words could see the next one happen.

So what are these game changers?

These were periods of transition. The first was the shift from hunter and gathers to agriculture. While this might seem like an insignificant event, from an economic productions standpoint, it was huge.

The second was the Industrial Revolution. This had another major impact on humanity, completely altering output.

Economic Doubling

When human lived as hunters and gathers, life was very slow. While this is true for the agricultural period too, we can see how little changed.

In these primitive economies, growth was basically equal to population growth. Since there weren't many technological advancement, we see little acceleration in individual output. Thus, since it took an estimated 2 million years to go from some protohuman to 4 million people, that is the pace of economic growth many go with.

The net result is a doubling of the economy roughly every 250,000 years.

Turning into a society based upon agriculture, saw massive improvements. According to Bradford Long, the noted economic historian of University of California, Berkeley, the doubling time during that era was 900 years. While this is absurd compared to our standards, it was 250x faster than was previously seen.

Which brings up to the modern world. Doing some simply math, we see that we are now doubling at a rate 60 times faster than during the Ag period. The industrial revolution was a period of massive change and we can see it in the numbers.

Game Changer 3

To be a game changer, we need something that radically alters the entire economy. Thus, something that affects an individual sector or industry is notenough. For example, nanotechnology might off great potential but the focus would be manufacturing/construction. This account for between 10%-15% of the total economy. It is significant yet still not large enough.

Ultimately, we are talking about something that affects every industry. Here is where we come up with one solution: labor.

The next game changer is going to have to change the output by labor. This, naturally, gets us thinking about artificial intelligence and robotics. Actually, with our shift into the digital world, it is likely the AI has the greater impact.

How does this tie into Web3?

If we step back and look at the Internet Age in general, perhaps we gain some insight. Web3 is simply an evolution of an ongoing process towards digitization. The Industrial Revolution was not a singular event that suddenly altered the employment make up of society. It unfolded over many decades.

The same is going to be true of the next game changer. We know the internet is an accelerant, radically affecting the industries it touches. Web3 is a new business structure that presents a new ownership model. On its own, this is not reach the standard we are discussing.

However, one of the keys of Web 3.0 is going to be artificial intelligence. This could be coupled with AI. As we move towards a "superintelligence", however that is defined, we could see the acceleration necessary to produce another game changer.

How Would That Look?

We often discuss the Age of Abundance. This is how it breaks down against the backdrop of the overall economy.

If we see a transition over the next half century that mirror the gains realized by the Industrial Revolution, we are going to see another 60x in the doubling time.

Presently we are dealing with 15 years, or 180 months. A similar change as before would equate to the economy doubling every three months.

Let that sink in for a moment.

It is truly mind blowing and to the point that we cannot really comprehend it. However, this is no different than an ancient Roman walking into London in the 1840s. That would have been incomprehensible to that person.

To take it a step further, imagine someone from the 1860s suddenly showing up in Tokyo or New York City today. They would not grasp even the most minute aspects of our economy.

In my view, Web3 is not going to be the cause of this massive expansion. It does, however, play a crucial role in this evolution. Since it changes the ownership structures, it radically alters how we spread the economic productivity across the population.

This is also not without precedent. It is likely not a mistake that the corporation exploded as a business structure over the last 150 years, paralleling the industrial age. This helped to capture the increased output and spread it to more people. All talks of inequality today are laughable compared to the age of monarchs in the pre-industrial age.

Tokenization could be the next evolution in terms of ownership structure. Here we are looking at another way to capture and distribute economic output, something radically different from what we experience today. Of course, this is being resisted by much of society. We know that corporations were a difficult sell to the European aristocratic land owners of the 1800s.

This is what I think is the importance of blockchain and cryptocurrency. We are dealing with a much larger trend, one that could have massive economic implications.

Again, these are developments that takes decades to unfold. We are likely looking at the realization of this, on a large scale, somewhere around 2070.

Some of the younger readers of this will be around to witness that.


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It is true that to be a game changer one must do something exceptional. Our labor and talent are important there. By using them, something exceptional is possible.

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I agree that we are in the presence tech that will change drastically the future, its like other things like digital content creation and web3 were waiting for AI to catapult it to new way higher levels, probably to the all abundance times you have mention before and the next 10 years will be very interesting, similar to what smart phones did in the last 20 years, I want Hive to be part of that sling shot process, preparing myself for 2024 to be a better and great year on Hive, my rookie season is about to be over close to 1 year here now

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The trajectory for growth could mirror (exceed) the last 25 years due to technology. What is referred to here is a complete change in the economy. That is where the massive gains are made.

Could it be happening? We will see.

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Web3 is the future and it can't be denied. No matter what, the growth in the future is not evitable

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This is a very interesting theory. But having the target be in 2070, feels a bit much. Looking at the speed of technological improvements the past few years, a lot of things can happen in that time. Generative AI started around 10 years ago. I do believe that Web3 has the capability of bringing massive change, but I would like to think that by 2070, something has already replaced it by then. Something we haven't invented/thought of yet.

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It might be overly pessimistic in terms of the time frame. Of course, how far along is AI technology really. Many feel the singularity will hit around 2050-2060. While many are closer in, some are further out. These are the experts of today.

So we will see how it unfolds. If 2070, I likely will not see it.

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That makes sense. I would probably be dead by then as well, or too old to care.

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It was very interesting! I enjoyed reading it and a lot of ideas stuck in my mind! Future generations will see and understand! Definitely, if we can go to the future, it happens only in the movies, and in that case, we will not be able to understand that environment or maybe its decline! The thing that bothers me is that this article seems to be written from the point of view of a person in the United States! Where everything revolves around defined principles! What has been the impact of today's economy? This amount of progress is unique to which parts of the world?
Whales also exist in the blockchain, just like in different eras where we had people with different positions! The question is, has blockchain been able to eliminate this classification?
It's so important! When you enter the hive as a newbie, don't you fall into the same category? Whale, newbie and.... the titles you have based on the amount of coins or tokens on the blockchains! Just like the society we are in! These divisions will never go away!🤔

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Blockchain is in the early stages. We still have a lot more building to do before any of the questions you pose can be answered.

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Web3 is a game changer but we actually need to look it deep. There are still some corrections web3 will need to cover up to prepare to overthrow the economy of some countries

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This is an interesting prediction. The industrial revolution happened in a couple of different phases. The first phase was in Great Britain during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The second phase took place in other countries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The full extent of the revolution was about 200 years. It reached its zenith. probably, in the mid to late 19th century, or maybe early 20th century. Going by this timeline, one could say the industrial revolution had solidified the type of economic change you're talking about by the mid-19th century. It took about 80 years.

Going by that, the next economic revolution will likely not take that long. If it began with the advent of the World Wide Web and only takes 40 years, we're almost there now. If it takes 60 years, we're still about 25 years out. If you're using the introduction of bitcoin as the catalyst, then we're talking about somewhere in the 2040-2070 range for making the kind of paradigm shift you're discussing.

At any rate, this is fodder for consideration.

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As long as we don't reach Terminator-level AI by 2050 I'll be incredibly happy (and a senior citizen)! It is mindblowing to consider the increased speed of technological evolution over my lifetime (that started in 1980). As microchips continue to shrink in size and expand in power, the applications they run and the data being mined provide humanity immeasurable advantages to continue its rapid development into the future.

There is still the threat of a black swan event that does serious damage to the human population, especially to major cities that tend to be centers of progress. And while technology improves, birthrates drop and the threat of looming bubbles in student loans and commercial real estate increases putting more strain on the human workforce.

UBI needs to be brought to the table, go full dystopia with rationed CBDCs. I won't mind more oversight as long as regulations are sound and there is still public visibility. SEC has to be jealous of the deal Circle has going right now.

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