When we focus too much on money as stacks of paper bills or numbers on a ledger – or trillions of dollars in government spending bills – we can miss the powerful forces that we interact with every day that make those bills and numbers meaningful.
Do you remember the Apple Newton (a personal digital assistant device)? Of course you don’t. Even though it was pushed for years by Apple‘s (Nasdaq: AAPL) then-CEO John Sculley, it was a failure in the market. It seemed to be a genuinely great idea, and Apple devoted tremendous resources to developing it. But when it came to being seen as useful by actual customers, it failed miserably.
On the other hand, there’s a good chance you have an Apple iPhone within easy reach. In contrast to the Apple Newton, the iPhone has been a tremendous success – because customers have seen it as valuable enough to buy.
The Apple Newton was tested by trade and failed; the iPhone continues to be tested by trade and continues to be a success… that is, until a better idea comes along.
(And in fact, the elements of the Apple Newton that were valuable are all contained in the iPhone or iPad, so it’s often not as simple as the surface success or failure can look.)
Wealth is created through innovative ideas that save time and energy, increasing the quality of life for enough people. The less time and energy it takes to do something, the more time and energy is freed up to do something else.
As innovations in machinery and technology have advanced – dramatically so over the past 200 years – there has been less need for human physical labor. What took a textile worker 20 minutes to make in 1750 took just one minute in 1850 – making it possible for fewer people to easily supply more goods and services.
When a machine loom is substituted for a hand loom, the physical labor that used to go to the hand loom can now go toward other things – supervising, repairing or improving the machine loom (or doing something else entirely). The person who had been confined to working the loom by hand can now do something more complex, satisfying… and valuable.
The freedom and respect given to regular people with new ideas – who could potentially implement those ideas to make a lot of money – has led to the greatest expansion of prosperity in history… and the greatest improvement in almost every facet of life for nearly all of humanity.
From Humble Beginnings
Trade and the money that facilitates it have been part of the human story since the first painted and drilled Nassarius shell beads found their way to the middle of Africa some 80,000 years ago. Trade encouraged innovation and the spread of ideas well beyond those palm-sized hand axes that were the sole observable innovation for over a million years before that.
Many of the inventions we think of as originating during the Industrial Revolution in Europe had already been created or discovered long before, but they were never encouraged or adopted widely through trade.
People in China were using natural gas for lighting in the fourth century B.C.; movable metal type had been invented in Korea in the 13th century; the method of inoculating against smallpox was an Ottoman Empire discovery brought to England; and quality cotton, porcelain and cast iron were brought from Asia. The blast furnace was invented in China long before it was invented again in Sweden.
But there was a hindrance to bringing these kinds of inventions into the world on a large scale.
The lack of encouragement – culturally and politically – in the past for the sort of creative problem-solving among regular people that we take for granted today meant no Industrial Revolution nor Great Enrichment was able to occur earlier in history.
The culture – led by the clerisy and aristocracy of China, for example – did not encourage innovation. Nor did it create an atmosphere of dignity and liberty for regular people to practice innovation and to make money by bringing it to the larger population. But China wasn’t unique in this.
Today, we think of innovations as largely good things, exciting things, things to look forward to. But in Europe, “innovation” until the late 1800s was largely seen as a negative quality. This is likely why Leonardo da Vinci in 1519 had to hide his inventions in secret mirror image writing.
During the Renaissance, there were innovations in art and science involving and largely benefiting the aristocracy but not improving the lives of regular people – advances in things like perspective drawing, architecture and human dissection, to name a few. All fine and good, but of a different nature from what led to the Great Enrichment that we enjoy today, which improves and enriches the lives of everybody.
As innovations are developed and traded among the large population of regular people – rather than just a small percentage of the aristocracy or clerisy as had largely been the case before – they are able to inspire and affect other innovations, multiplying the impact of each new idea.
Through trade, innovations have a chance to cross-fertilize with other innovations, creating ever-expanding networks of brilliant ideas.
So now, for example, instead of typing this column on a manual typewriter, buying stamps, sending it through the mail and having my editor wait days to receive it – among a hundred other ancient inconveniences (remember when correction fluids like Liquid Paper and Wite-Out were a breakthrough?) – I now type it on my computer, attach it to an email and click “send.”
Instead of renting an office where my clients have to drive to meet with me, we talk by phone or video from wherever we happen to be. This also means that I can work with anyone, anywhere, instead of confining my business to those who are close enough to travel to see me.
But if this way of working wasn’t valuable to enough people, I would have to do something else. Trade provides the feedback for what is valuable to people right now… and what isn’t.
Contained within these simple examples are multitudes of separate innovations that have made the whole picture possible. Affordable telephone calls… manual typewriter to electric typewriter to word processor to word processor incorporated in a personal computer… cutting and pasting… the internet… email… larger memory and faster processing… videoconferencing… These are just a handful of the innovations that we take for granted today – to the point where we get frustrated when any of them isn’t working optimally, costing us valuable seconds of our time.
New ideas inspire other new ideas. New combinations and applications are pieced together, creating even better innovations. Every innovation increases the value of each person’s work and therefore their wealth and eventually the wealth of us all.
Money is the medium of exchange that makes trading these innovations possible…
But it’s the incredible dynamism of culturally encouraged, liberty-nurtured, trade-tested innovation involving all of us that gives wealth meaning – and enriches us all.
Be well,
Joel