Public key encryption, in
R >As I see it, cryptography may extend similar conditions to R >information workers - programmers, architects, authors. Naturally, R >since a disproportionate number of those on the net fall into these R >categories, this seems like a revolutionary development. But from the R >larger perspective, it is not a major change. R > R >The fact is, information purchases are a small part of most people's R >budgets. If you add up all of what the average person purchases that R >would fall into the general category of "information" - books, R >magazines, newspapers, music, video - you probably won't exceed a few R >percent of income. Information, despite the hype, is not a dominant R >part of our economy. You left out a few information purchases: education, much of medicine, all of financial services, design, marketing, supervision, and management. Note the current tendany to "unbundle" tasks and outsource them to other businesses will tend to encourage the development of "information only" companies. Once the interface is good enough, virtual offices with full workgroup interaction built of pure information will spring up and the "information" component of much of what we think of as physical work will become apparent. I expect information purchases (broadly defined) to reach 90% of our GDP in a few years. Agriculture once represented 90% of GWP (Gross World Product). It is now down to the 5% range in the OECD countries. Yet we eat better than our ancestors. Goods industries (and real estate sales) can show a similar relative decline. We will have more "stuff" than ever, it will just be a smaller part of the total economy. What will cause this growth? Humans are *thinking* machines. We exist inside our minds. We already exist as 100% information. What we are doing is to map the rest of the world to bring it into congruance with what we already are. We don't feel as many constraints in our mind as we do in our bodies. We are deploying our minds to reduce the physical restraints under which we've labored. (Just a guess...) In any case, since the restraints are fewer in the non-physical universe than in the physical universe, costs are lower and much of the growth of the economy will be in the non-physical realm. Certainly the non-physical parts of the economy have grown more than the physical ones in the OECD countries in recent years. If there is also a *regulatory* difference between the physical and the non-physical worlds, then this switch to the non-physical will be exaserbated. R >Particularly at the corporate level, the notion that cryptography R >will allow widespread tax cheating seems especially questionable. Did you see HP on 60 Minutes with Indian contract programmers hired cheaply in probable violatiion of US immigration law. Companies are already setting up programming shops in India. Once they are set up "in cyberspace" they will be harder to control. R >I don't fully understand Duncan's arguments for how taxes can be R >avoided through being a non-citizen. I gather, though, that this would R >require me to either move to another country, or to go to work for a R >company that is in another country. Neither seems likely in the next R >few years for the majority of citizens. 95% of the world's population are not US Citizens/Permanent Residents. You may not be willing to live in another country but they already are. Since other countries don't tax their expats (as the US does) it is easier for non-US expats to eliminate their tax liability. In the past you had to be in the US to work here but foreigners will soon be able to work for US-based companies as easily as anyone else. Because of tax savings, they will be able to underbid US workers. Also companies (or more likely contract services firms) will be able to themselves locate in friendlier jurisdictions and still supply workers (from anywhere on earth to anywhere on earth) to companies that may be in the US or somewhere else. Remember, under current law it is legal for a US company to hire workers overseas and US taxes are not owed. There are technical questions of withholding from payments to entities located in non-tax-treaty jurisdictions but these problems can be planned around. Offshore subsidiaries will also be very cheap to form. If you wander down the shopping street of a future MUD/MOO and you buy or sell things, what nation has jurisdiction for tax purposes. What if the MUD/MOO exists as a set of cooperative processes spread around the globe. There is commerce there but who rules. The proprietors not any government. Look at the situation in this country vis a vis state income and sales taxes. There is tremendous fiddling going on now in a country with the soverign jurisdiction of the federal government and concepts like "full faith and credit." Imagine how much fiddling there will be when disperate soverignties are involved with no overall international authority. Tax compliance is down anyway, it will further decline as more people are self-employed or "reside" in ambiguous jurisdictions. DCF --- WinQwk 2.0b#1165
You left out a few information purchases: education, much of medicine, all of financial services, design, marketing, supervision, and management.
Indeed. Some years ago I ran into a guy at Newark Airport who was on his way to Barbados. We struck up a conversation, and it turned out that he ran a data entry business. He ships documents of various kinds to Barbados where workers convert them to machine-readable form and return the tapes. I asked why Barbados. The answer was very simple: it's about the only English-speaking third-world country in the western hemisphere with a decent literacy rate (99%, according to my National Geographic atlas). The economy was bad, and the people were happy to get the work. This got me thinking about the impossibility of regulating and taxing the international transmission of information. At the time I was thinking more in terms of the impossibility of enforcing US import duties; who's to say what a particular magtape is worth? If this guy is still in business I suspect he has long since replaced physical magtape shipments with electronic transfers, which bypasses Customs completely. I suspect there are many other similiar operations, and the trend is strongly positive. Phil
participants (2)
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Duncan Frissell -
karn@qualcomm.com