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♪ [music] ♪
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- [Narrator] "Infinity War" is known
for its spectacular special effects.
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But we can pretty certain
that in a couple of decades.
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they'll look old and outdated.
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That's just the way it goes with movies.
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- [Ian] The first adult movie
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that I ever saw was
the original "Jaws" in summer camp.
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It was terrifying,
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and now you go back
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and look at the mechanical shark
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that jumped onto the boat,
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the great white,
over 20 feet long, thrashing about,
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and you go, "That is a ridiculous,
stupid-looking thing."
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So, I feel pretty clear
that we have come a long way
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since the '70s in terms
of graphics.
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- [Narrator] This constant
improvement is not limited
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to special effects --
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sound quality, picture quality,
theater seats.
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You name it,
it seems to have improved.
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Well, maybe not the acting.
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- [Edward] Oh no, not the bees!
Not the bees! Ahh!
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- [Narrator] Economists have a term
for this type of improvement --
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"creative destruction."
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- [Tyler] Creative destruction was
a term in Economics
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coined by an Austrian economist,
Joseph Schumpeter,
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early in the 20th century.
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It's really become
a central driving idea in Economics.
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- [Narrator] Creative destruction
describes the continual process
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of innovation in which new products
and services replace outdated ones.
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Take photos -- we live in a world
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of smartphones, Instagram,
and augmented reality.
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How we got here reveals
a long and winding path
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of creative destruction.
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- When I was a kid,
you take a photo,
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and the Polaroid comes out,
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you wave it around because you think
it's going to make it dry faster.
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I don't know
if that actually worked.
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And it's several minutes later,
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and it probably doesn't
look very good,
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but you have it!
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And 10 years later, it's all faded,
and it probably doesn't keep.
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- [Narrator] Before the digital era,
you might have a Polaroid
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or you might buy film,
typically from Kodak.
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You had to pay
a few dollars for film,
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which got you about 20 pictures,
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and then pay more
to get them developed.
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- [man] Got double prints with mine!
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- [Narrator] If, whoops,
your eyes were shut -- too bad!
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You didn't know until days later.
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And if you accidentally
opened your camera,
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poof, your pictures are gone!
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Digital cameras came on the scene
at the end of the 20th century.
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Entrepreneurs quickly improved
the cameras, the software,
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and the accessories.
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People increasingly switched
away from film.
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It was cheaper, easier
and more enjoyable.
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These entrepreneurs represent
the creative side
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of creative destruction.
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But what about the flip side,
the destruction?
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Polaroid employed
over 20,000 people in their heyday.
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Kodak dwarfed Polaroid,
employing over 120,000 employees
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and being one of the most
well-known companies in the world.
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The digital age,
while rejoiced by consumers,
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ushered them both
into bankruptcy.
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- But let's be clear, the people
that used to make the Polaroids
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and the Kodaks
don't like that development
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because they just lost jobs.
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- [Narrator] Polaroids have had
a bit of a resurgence lately
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as a retro product,
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but that's actually
not the same company
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that made the originals.
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That Polaroid is long gone.
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See, there are two sides
of creative destruction.
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Entrepreneurs inventing new products
or ways to save money
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are how we improve
our standard of living.
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These improvements are
the foundation of prosperity,
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and positively impact
generation after generation.
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But the flip side can make jobs
or even whole industries go extinct.
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Unlike the games,
that pain typically subsides.
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People usually find new jobs.
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Most of those thousands
of employees at Polaroid and Kodak
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went on to other types of work.
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When you take the long view,
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these job changes
have historically been beneficial.
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In the 1800s, more than half
of the United States
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was employed in farming.
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Because of time-saving inventions
like the tractor,
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farmers now make up
less than 2% of the workforce.
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- Now you might think,
"My goodness! Those poor farmers!
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Where did they go? What kind of jobs
could they possibly have had?"
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But by liberating that labor,
we made it possible for people
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to do things,
like produce automobiles,
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produce airplanes,
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for more people
to become entertainers
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or movie stars,
more people to become doctors.
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- [Narrator] So in the long run,
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we have fewer people
working with film
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and more building
photo apps and the like.
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However, in the short run,
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the transition can
be extremely painful.
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If you've spent your life perfecting
the craft of developing film,
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you're not walking out of Kodak
and into a sweet gig at Instagram.
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You might just be out of a job
and out of luck.
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Creative destruction comes
in many forms.
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We often think
of the transformative technology,
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like the tractor,
or the digital camera,
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or the smartphone,
which fundamentally changes
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how we do things.
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Here's a not so obvious source
of creative destruction -- trade.
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- Trading with another nation,
it is a kind of technology.
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It's a way of getting
something else more cheaply.
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You're taking things
you used to produce,
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finding a newer, cheaper way
of doing it --
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be it with tractors, with robots,
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or with foreign trade.
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And they're all technologies
enabling us to produce
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new and better things more cheaply.
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- [Narrator] For example,
roses used to be grown in the U.S.
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raised in heated greenhouses.
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Now, instead of burning fuel
to keep the roses warm,
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most of our roses come
from warm weather climates.
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This creative destruction
has produced a plentiful supply
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of affordable roses.
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But just like with Kodak,
not everyone benefits.
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That rose farmer
in Pennsylvania isn't thrilled
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by the introduction of foreign roses.
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She might be out of a job.
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More than ever, better education
and training programs are needed
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so that people can transition
to new types of work.
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- Why is this so important now?
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I do think there's
a very specific reason,
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and that is the nature of jobs
and the workplace is changing
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at an accelerating rate.
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So the importance of being able
to retrain yourself,
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the importance of being able
to learn how to learn
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has never been more important
than it is today.
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- [Narrator] Why did Tyler say
the workplace is changing
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at an accelerating rate?
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Remember how
the information revolution
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allowed companies to slice
and dice their factories
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into a global supply chain?
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That has increased competition
in the workplace.
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Take Apple -- they're evaluating
every link of their supply chain.
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Can they make this step cheaper?
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Can they make this component better?
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Back in the old days,
employees just had to worry
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about losing their job
to someone nearby.
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Now they might lose it
to a person or robot or software
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that could come
from anywhere on the planet.
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This means that jobs appear,
disappear, and evolve
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more quickly than ever.
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That sounds intimidating,
but remember,
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this competition drives
the frequent explosions
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of creative destruction
that are the signs
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of a healthy, vibrant economy.
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But we can't forget
the flip side of the coin.
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There are those that are hurt
by these explosions.
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- So there's no question
that creative destruction
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has been a great thing
for human beings.
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We just need to remember that
the people that are displaced --
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we have to make sure
that we don't forget those people.
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We have to make sure
that they have opportunities too.
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- [Narrator] Next up, we'll ask
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are there winners and losers
of globalization?
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Click "Next Video" to keep learning.
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