Technological Revolutions and Stock Returns

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Carlota Perez, in her 2002 book "Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital," argues technological revolutions occur in roughly 50-year cycles. She identifies five such episodes, starting with the Industrial Revolution in Britain (1771) and ending with the information and telecommunications revolution in the U.S. (1971).

revolution table

In light of the AI revolution — which arguably began on November 30, 2022 with the introduction of ChatGPT, almost exactly 50 years after the start of the Information Age — her book appears especially prescient.

Perez argues that each revolution proceeds in four phases:

  • The irruption phase sees the introduction of the new technology to the world.
  • This is followed by the frenzy stage, when society begins to understand the power of the new technology and invests resources in its development. The interaction of financial capital and technological change ultimately leads to a market crash at the end of this stage.
  • At this point, the synergy stage begins, where the best uses of the technology are discovered and resources are efficiently funneled into supporting them.
  • Finally, the revolution enters its maturity phase, at which point most investments have already been made, and the technology settles into the fabric of ordinary life. At this point, a new “great surge” begins as another revolutionary technology enters the public consciousness.

Against this backdrop, Perez produces timelines of the five great technological revolutions. In her estimation, the Industrial Revolution started in 1771 and lasted through 1829. At this point, the Age of Steam and Railways began, lasting until 1873. In 1875, steel, electricity, and heavy engineering began, ending in 1918. The Age of Oil, Automobiles, and Mass Production lasted from 1908 until 1974, overlapping for a decade with the end of the prior technological epoch. Finally, the Information and Telecommunications Age began in 1971 and was ongoing when the book was published in 2002.