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Globalizing the Knowledge Economy
Remarks before the Houston World Affairs Council
Houston, Texas
April 13, 2007

When addressing an audience, it is customary for Federal Reserve officials to declare that they speak only for themselves and not for any other senior officials at the Fed, nor for any colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee. That will be true today with one exception: I speak for everyone at the Federal Reserve in stating an admiration for the dynamism and spirit of this great city. Thank you for inviting me to this meeting of the Houston World Affairs Council.

I am going to talk to you today about globalization. This is a trendy word these days, and I have no doubt that I am not the first person to address the topic of globalization before this august group. I doubt I am even the 10th or the 20th speaker from whose lips you have heard that now ubiquitous word.

But today, I am going to do something so shocking and rare that you may actually gasp in amazement: I am going to quote a French politician. And I am going to quote him approvingly, with apologies in advance that by doing so I might damage his presidential campaign.

Last November, the Financial Times quoted Nicolas Sarkozy offering the French electorate a distinctly politically incorrect dose of reality. “Globalization is a fact,” Sarkozy said. “It would be as pointless to deny it or oppose it as to challenge the law of gravity or to stop the movement of the clouds. The question therefore is not whether globalization is good or bad. It is whether we are prepared for it.”

I could not agree more. While it may be cathartic or politically convenient to cast negative aspersions on globalization, it is a futile exercise. We have passed the point of no return in the intermingling of the world’s economies. It is now a given. Mr. Sarkozy asks the right question: Are we prepared for it?

The economic impact of globalization is the topic of the Dallas Fed’s 2006 annual report essay, titled “The Best of All Worlds,” which we are releasing to the public today—as soon as I finish this speech. You will be the first to have it. Please take it home and read the essay written by Michael Cox and Richard Alm, two of the Dallas Fed’s best and most eloquent minds.

The essay points out that the simultaneous opening up of the world economy—especially the integration of markets due to the telecommunications revolution and the development of cyberspace—has changed the way every entrepreneur, every manager, and every business woman and man in America contemplates their cost of goods sold and the markets they sell to as they navigate into the future.

The essay explores 10 ways globalization raises productivity and reduces costs. I am going to summarize them for you. But first, let me set the stage with a story about a good friend of mine named Dr. Jonathan Weissler, who holds the chair in pulmonary research named for my late, great father-in-law, Jim Collins, at the University of Texas Southwestern University Hospitals in Dallas, where Dr. Weissler is chief of medicine.

When Dr. Weissler sees a patient, he, like most doctors, dictates examination notes into a recorder so that the information can be transcribed into the patient’s file. Nothing startling there; this has been standard medical practice for decades. What is new—and a hallmark of what we call the Knowledge Economy—is that instead of paying an on-site employee at UT Southwestern to transcribe his dictation, he sends the recording electronically to a company that farms the work out to English speakers around the world to transcribe overnight. They type up the notes for a fraction of the cost while Dr. Weissler sleeps. And voilà, they are on the good doctor’s desktop the next morning.

Incidentally, Dr. Weissler says he can tell when the transcripts are produced in India because the English is perfect and even the most complex medical terms are spelled correctly—a testimony to the Indian ability to teach the blocking and tackling of proper English in their schools.

By reducing costs and streamlining his recordkeeping in this way, Weissler’s practice runs more efficiently and his staff can devote more time to serving patients. The real payoff is that the money saved can be reinvested into researching new ways to save and improve lives.

Dr. Weissler is more than prepared for globalization. Rather than cower before it, he is harnessing it. He is availing himself of resources created by the spread of knowledge around the world in order to save money and run an efficient operation. Therein lies an American-style answer to Monsieur Sarkozy’s pithy question.

To some this is alarming—especially those who focus on jobs lost to globalization, like the ones held by Texans and other Americans who once transcribed those notes for Dr. Weissler. Dwelling on these lost jobs or outsourced tasks ignores lessons of history. To be sure, we cannot and should not ignore the painful adjustments that economic advancement inflicts upon displaced workers; we should never underestimate the human costs of the process known to economists as creative destruction, a term coined by the iconic economist Joseph Schumpeter in 1942.

I grew up in a household where my father suffered more than his fair share of the destructive side of that process. It was difficult for him to grasp the allure of the “creative” side of the equation, and I am more familiar with the anguish that comes when a breadwinner loses his job than I would like to be. But I consider it a fool’s errand to seek to somehow stop the momentum of globalization, particularly when one considers that jobs lost to globalization pale in comparison to jobs lost to the steady march of technological progress. I rarely hear the speakers who cast invective upon “globalization” also decry the evils of new technologies and innovation.

It is the job of our political leaders to provide a bridging mechanism for people like my dear old dad—God rest his hardworking soul—that mitigates the destruction without hindering the creative side of Schumpeter’s phenomenon.

American entrepreneurs and workers have developed a mastery of creative destruction—albeit with fits and starts—over the past 200 years. Our $13 trillion economy—the world’s biggest, by far—is proof that we can adapt to new circumstances and profit from the benefits those circumstances provide. To be prepared for globalization—to harness it and ride it to continued prosperity—we must remain at the forefront of the Information Age. We must master the Knowledge Economy.

The lesson of the essay is that globalization is spreading the Knowledge Economy around the globe—and the Knowledge Economy is accelerating the pace of globalization. While globalization itself is not new, it has gathered intensity over the past decade or so because of technologies that make it cheaper and easier to move information to nearly all corners of the world.

We have had decades to contemplate globalization in goods—many of which come through the Port of Houston—that were produced by cheap labor and abundant resources in faraway lands like China. But globalization has spread beyond manufactured goods to other segments of the economy, rapidly moving up the value-added ladder. Computers, the Internet, high-capacity fiber-optic cables and other marvels of modern communications fuel the extension of international competition into a broad realm of the economy that had been largely isolated from it. I am referring, of course, to the globalization of the services sector.

Many services are still untouched by globalization. It remains impractical, for example, for a Houstonian to enjoy the pristine sushi freshly made by the dockside chefs who work around Tokyo’s Tsukiji fish market, or to import the services of a barber who lives in Seville—sorry, I couldn’t resist that one. But many more services from all parts of the world can be delivered here in the blink of an eye (or in 40 winks of Dr. Weissler's eye overnight), thanks to the revolution in communication technologies that allow knowledge to overcome traditional impediments of distance.

Dr. Weissler shows us how some of the medical profession’s common support services have been globalized. Yet, his example is but the tip of the iceberg of the ways we can stretch the boundaries of high-skilled services. In 2001, a surgeon in New York, using robotic tools, removed the gallbladder of a patient 3,870 miles away in the French city of Strasbourg. In 2005, a laptop computer in Boston guided instruments as they performed heart surgery—unaided by human hands—on a patient in Milan, Italy. Geographic boundaries and technological impediments are evaporating even at the far reaches of the value-added realm.

It is trends like these that inspired us at the Dallas Fed to unleash Michael Cox and Rick Alm and our other researchers to consider the ways globalization is changing our economy.

Here are the 10 ways in which globalization now impacts the Knowledge Economy. We have found that globalization lowers communication and transportation costs, point No. 1; fuels competition, point No. 2; and encourages specialization, point No. 3. A firm can now access labor, raw materials and other resources at any time and from anywhere on the globe, resulting in point No. 4: improved production functions.

Producers can sell their goods and services to a larger market, No. 5, and extend their economies of scale, No. 6, by producing to satisfy global, not just domestic, demand.

Point No. 7, capital markets expand, freeing money to seek the highest return available globally and to fund development of new production capacity anywhere on the planet.

Point 8, knowledge spreads across towns, industries and countries, fueled by migration, the Internet, cell phones and trade.

Globalization erodes national or natural monopoly power, making markets more accessible to competition and more fair to consumers—or in other words, more “contestable,” point 9. And finally, increased production leads to increased consumption without reducing the amount available for others to consume, point 10. Just because I’m downloading the most recent episode of 24 from iTunes does not mean someone in Norway cannot download it, too.

The common thread among these 10 factors is that they all raise productivity’s level or its growth rate—or both. Higher productivity lowers costs. Lower costs restrain inflation, the bête noire of any progressive economy and the bane of Federal Reserve officials and central bankers everywhere. In this fundamental way, globalization raises the economy’s speed limit, allowing policymakers to relax a little and let the economy expand at rates that might once have been considered unsustainable. In a globalized world, faster growth need not carry the same inflationary implications it does in a closed world.

The Fed’s mandate calls for keeping inflation low while maintaining maximum sustainable economic growth—a duty we cannot fulfill without weighing productivity. Getting more output from existing labor and capital allows the economy to grow faster without igniting price pressures. We saw this vividly, for example, in the 1990s, when the IT revolution led to surging productivity, lower costs and faster growth. The Fed understood that increased supplies of goods and services, not inflationary excess demand, fueled the expansion, and it wisely let the economy seek a higher growth rate.

Considering all the dynamics of our globalized world, one problem monetary policymakers have is that we find ourselves lacking proper measuring sticks to capture these intangible dynamics. When a Boston doctor operates remotely on a patient in Milan, should we credit it to the U.S. economy or the Italian economy? A Barbie doll is designed in America and assembled in Malaysia from Taiwanese plastic pellets, Chinese cloth and Japanese nylon. Is the doll American or Malaysian or something else? When people in the U.S. and other countries can work together so seamlessly, how can we pull them apart with the data? Our annual report underscores how the world is fast becoming one big integrated economy, which suggests we should care as much about foreign output gaps, capacity utilization rates and unemployment rates as we do about our own.

Traditional economic doctrine does not recognize the importance of foreign output to a country’s inflation rate. Only domestic output matters. But a new economic model, produced by the Dallas Fed, allows us to show that foreign output also matters. For central bankers, getting policy right will involve analyzing a great deal of additional data and overcoming blind spots about what’s going on in key parts of the world. We don’t, for example, know as much as we’d like about China’s capital stock, work hours and rural unemployment. We have no reliable estimates of the productive capacity in Brazil, India and Russia. All the data shortcomings are maddening, but they aren’t reason enough to deny the fundamental fact that globalization is changing the way our economies work.

Data that do not reflect the world in which we live increase the chances for errors in judgment. We need to develop much better measures for the global economy, particularly as services are increasingly traded. Today, our most detailed measures pertain to goods, a proportionally shrinking segment of our economy. We can tell you about agriculture and manufacturing in excruciating detail but have relatively little data about our fast-growing services sector—now 82 percent of U.S. employment. We have even less data on the global services economy.

Globalization doesn’t just drive down costs. It advances living standards in ways not captured by the standard economic measures of progress. We need new and better tools to help us determine just how globalization is affecting economies around the world, and how policymakers can reap benefits from these insights. Getting it right may well alter our notions of economic progress, with ramifications for how we approach the goal of price stability.

The Dallas Fed is hard at work researching this issue. We are in the process of establishing the Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute, and our economic research team—the same people who inform our Bank’s participation in the Federal Open Market Committee—is focused with laserlike intensity on advancing our knowledge of these underresearched and poorly understood phenomena.

I hope that our annual report will give you insight into how the operators of our economy—men and women like yourselves who keep our mighty economic machine humming—address the Sarkozy Challenge. Are we prepared for globalization? The answer is in your hands.

Thank you.

About the Author

Richard W. Fisher is president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Note

The views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System.

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[뉴스핌 베스트 기사]

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14~15일 중부 최대 120㎜ 폭우 예고 [서울=뉴스핌] 김지나 기자 = 행정안전부가 14일 오후부터 중부지방을 중심으로 강풍을 동반한 집중호우가 예보됨에 따라 관계기관 대책회의를 열고 침수·산사태 우려 지역에 대한 선제 점검과 통제 강화를 지시했다. 행정안전부는 14일 윤호중 장관 주재로 관계기관 대책회의를 개최하고 호우와 강풍에 대비한 대응 상황을 점검했다고 밝혔다. 회의에는 행정안전부와 농림축산식품부, 기상청 등 10개 중앙행정기관과 16개 지방자치단체, 한국공항공사 등이 참석했다. 폭우가 쏟아진 9일 오전 서울역 인근에서 우산을 쓴 시민들이 발걸음을 재촉하고 있다. [사진=뉴스핌DB] 기상청에 따르면 이날 저녁부터 15일 새벽까지 수도권과 강원, 충청권을 중심으로 돌풍과 천둥·번개를 동반한 시간당 20~30㎜, 경기·강원 북부는 시간당 30~50㎜의 매우 강한 비가 내릴 것으로 예보됐다. 예상 강수량은 수도권 30~100㎜(경기 북부 최대 120㎜ 이상), 강원 내륙·산지 30~80㎜(많은 곳 100㎜ 이상), 충청권과 전북 30~80㎜, 전남과 제주 20~60㎜ 등이다. 행안부는 퇴근 시간대와 심야 시간에 강한 비가 집중될 것으로 예상되는 만큼 인명피해 예방에 중점을 두고 대응할 것을 관계기관에 주문했다. 우선 상습 침수지역과 피해 우려지역에 대한 사전 점검을 강화하고, 지하차도와 하상도로 등 침수 취약 구간은 실시간 모니터링을 통해 필요 시 선제적으로 출입을 통제하도록 했다. 빗물받이 이물질 제거와 반복 점검도 실시해 침수 피해를 최소화할 방침이다. 반지하주택과 하천변 산책로 등 침수 취약지역에 대한 예찰도 강화한다. 지난 8~10일 내린 비로 지반이 약해진 산지와 급경사지 등 붕괴 우려 지역은 사전 점검을 실시하고, 위험 징후가 확인되면 주민들이 신속히 대피할 수 있도록 안내할 계획이다. 특히 고령자 등 자력 대피가 어려운 주민은 주민대피지원단과 연계해 1대1 지원 체계를 재점검하도록 했다. 강풍에 대비한 안전조치도 강화된다. 행안부는 순간풍속 초속 20m 이상의 강풍이 예상됨에 따라 옥외광고물과 가로수, 건설현장 크레인, 공사장 가설시설 등 전도와 낙하 위험 시설물은 사전에 고정하거나 철거하도록 요청했다. 또 재난문자와 마을방송 등 다양한 매체를 활용해 기상정보와 국민행동요령을 신속히 전파하고 외출 자제와 위험지역 접근 금지 등을 적극 안내할 계획이다. 김용균 자연재난실장은 "정부는 집중호우와 강풍으로 인한 피해를 최소화하기 위해 대응체계를 빈틈없이 유지하겠다"며 "국민 여러분께서도 기상정보와 재난문자를 수시로 확인하고, 안전수칙을 준수해 주시길 바란다"라고 말했다.   abc123@newspim.com 2026-07-14 10:02
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트럼프 "호르무즈 통행료 20% 징수" [워싱턴=뉴스핌] 박정우 특파원 = 도널드 트럼프 미국 대통령은 13일(현지시간) 이란 항구에 대한 미 해군의 봉쇄조치를 재개한다고 선언했다. 또 미국이 호르무즈 해협을 통과하는 선박들에 안전을 제공하는 비용으로 선적 화물의 20%를 부과할 것이라고 밝혔다. 트럼프 대통령은 이날 소셜미디어 트루스소셜을 통해 "호르무즈 해협은 열려 있을 것이며, 이란이 원하든 원하지 않든 유지될 것"이라며 "이란 봉쇄(THE IRANIAN BLOCKADE) 조치를 재개한다"고 밝혔다. 이어 이란과 관련 물류 수송을 제외한 "다른 모든 국가들은 해협을 공정하고 자유롭게 이용할 수 있다"고 덧붙였다. 트럼프 대통령은 그러면서 미국이 '호르무즈 해협의 수호자(THE GUARDIAN OF THE HORMUZ STRAIT)'가 될 거라며 안전 제공 비용을 청구할 것이라고 선언했다. 그는 미국이 "수호자로서, 그리고 공정함의 차원에서, 이 불안정한 세계 요충지에 안전과 보안을 제공하는 업무에 필요한 모든 비용에 대해 선적 화물의 20% 비율로 보상(비용 청구)을 받을 것"이라며 관련 절차가 즉시 시작된다고 덧붙였다. 트럼프 대통령의 이날 대 이란 봉쇄 재개와 호르무즈 안전 제공 비용 징수 선언은 이란이 미국의 호르무즈해협 개방 요구를 거부하고 폐쇄를 선언한 뒤 나왔다. 미군은 이란에 대한 추가 공격에 나서 방공망과 드론 전력 등을 타격했다. 이로써 이란과 휴전 합의로 종료됐던 이란 항구에 대한 미군의 해상 봉쇄가 3주 만에 재개됐다. 트럼프 대통령은 특히 호르무즈해협을 미국이 관리하고 그 대가를 받겠다는 입장을 밝히며 사실상 해협 통제권 확보 의지를 드러냈다는 평가다. 반면 이란 군은 어떠한 경우에도 미국이 해협 관리에 개입하는 것을 허용하지 않겠다고 반발하고 있어 양측의 충돌이 격화될 가능성이 커 보인다는 평가다. 월스트리트저널(WSJ)은 "양측의 대립은 해협 통제권을 둘러싼 대치 상태가 지속될 가능성을 예고한다"며 "글로벌 석유 시장에 추가적인 압박을 가할 위험이 있다"고 경고했다. 실제 호르무즈 해협을 둘러싼 미국과 이란 간 대치 격화 속에 이날 브렌트유 가격은 배럴당 79달러대까지 오르며 약 4% 상승한 것으로 집계됐다. 호르무즈 통행량 회복세도 이미 꺾이는 등 해상 물류 위축 움직임은 이미 현실화하고 있다는 지적이다. 선박 추적 데이터 업체 케플러(Kpler)는 지난 주말 호르무즈 해협을 통과한 것으로 확인된 선박 수가 전주 대비 절반 이상 감소한 19척에 불과했다고 밝혔다. 이는 미국과 이란 간 예비 평화 협정인 양해각서(MOU)가 체결되기 전과 비슷한 수준으로 케플러는 대부분의 선박이 이란이 승인한 항로나 비밀 경로를 이용했으며, 미국이 지원하는 오만 인근 통로를 통한 통행은 끊겼다고 전했다. WSJ은 미국이 트럼프 대통령이 공언한 대로 호르무즈 해협을 군사적으로 장악하려면 상당한 규모의 지상군 침공이나 위험한 해군 작전이 필요할 것으로 전망했다.  도널드 트럼프 미국 대통령의 트루스소셜 게시글. [사진=트루스소셜] dczoomin@newspim.com 2026-07-14 00:17
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    우크라이나 전쟁 장기화 시 건설 및 중장비 수요 불확실성 직접적. 글로벌 인프라 투자 지연으로 매출 성장 둔화 가능성 있음.
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