Legendary venture capitalist Vinod Khosla predicts free medical and legal advice in about a decade, because of artificial intelligence. Some will dismiss the prediction as fanciful, given many similar predictions in the past.
As outlandish as that might appear, it is a common belief or prediction in the digital era, though there were some predictions that electricity, for example, would be “free” in the older analog world.
There were inaccurate predictions that nuclear power, for example, would be so cheap it would not be worth metering its use.
Study Title/Publication | Prediction | Date of Prediction | Publisher | Reason for Inaccuracy |
"The Promise of Nuclear Power" by Lewis Strauss, Chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission | Predicts that nuclear power will become so cheap that it will be "too cheap to meter." | 1954 | U.S. Atomic Energy Commission | Underestimated the costs of constructing and maintaining nuclear power plants, as well as the risks associated with nuclear accidents. |
"Nuclear Power: The Answer to the Energy Crisis" by Alvin Weinberg, Director of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory | Predicts that nuclear power will make electricity "too cheap to meter" by 1969. | 1960 | Public Affairs Press | Overestimated the rate at which nuclear power plants would be built and underestimated the costs of building and operating them. |
"Nuclear Energy and the Future of Power" by David Lilienthal, former Chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission | Predicts that nuclear power will provide "a virtually inexhaustible supply" of electricity at "extremely low cost." | 1967 | Basic Books | Underestimated the environmental and safety concerns associated with nuclear power. |
In recent decades, predictions of dramatically-lower product pricing--essentially free or near zero--have been made in a variety of areas where digital technology was expected to operate. In virtually all cases, assumptions were made about substitute products that would operate so affordably that existing products would not be attractive.
Study Title/Publication | Prediction | Date of Prediction | Publisher | Reason for Inaccuracy |
"The World Without Cars" by Peter Newman and Jeff Kenworthy | Predicts that cars will become obsolete in cities by 2030. | 1989 | Pluto Press | Underestimated the continued popularity of cars and the challenges of transitioning to car-free cities. |
"The Information Economy: How Digital Networks Will Transform the World" by Manuel Castells | Predicts that the information economy will lead to a more equitable society. | 1996 | Blackwell Publishers | Overestimated the potential of the information economy to reduce inequality. |
"The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More" by Chris Anderson | Predicts that the internet will allow niche products to become more profitable than mass-market products. | 2006 | Hyperion | Underestimated the power of marketing and branding in the digital age. |
"The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and the Future of Mankind" by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee | Predicts that automation will lead to widespread unemployment. | 2011 | W. W. Norton & Company | Overestimated the speed at which automation will replace human workers. |
"The Rise of the Robots: Automation and the Future of Work" by Martin Ford | Predicts that robots will eventually replace most human workers. | 2015 | Basic Books | Overestimated the capabilities of robots and underestimated the adaptability of human labor. |
All that noted, predictions about near-zero pricing for any variety of products continue to be made. It might be too soon to know whether such predictions will prove incorrect. And relative abundance, in some instances, might have outcomes largely indistinguishable from predictions of absolute abundance.
Internet access is not “free,” for example, but its price is low enough that usage is not a barrier. Many other products, such as search, shopping, social media and some forms of content cost so little that consumption can be subsidized fairly easy by advertising or low usage fees.
Study/Story | Prediction | Date of Prediction | Publisher |
"The Age of Free: Why We'll Soon Pay Nothing for Most of What We Use" | "Within the next two decades, many of the things we now pay for—electricity, food, transportation, housing, healthcare—will become essentially free." | 2014 | Jeremy Rifkin |
"The Free Economy: When Everything's Free" | "In the future, we will be able to produce goods and services in great abundance at very low cost, or even for free." | 2016 | Tom Slee |
"The Future of Abundance: How the Products of Human Ingenuity Will Make the World a Better Place" | "The abundance created by technology will eventually lead to a world where everyone has access to the basic necessities of life." | 2019 | Peter Diamandis and Steven Kotler |
"Radical Abundance: How to Create a World of More Than Enough" | "The potential for abundance exists in every sector of the economy." | 2020 | Marianne Williamson |
"The World We Made: How Our Future Will Be Shaped by Technology - For Better or for Worse" | "We are on the cusp of a new era of abundance, in which the cost of producing goods and services will continue to decline, and the potential for human flourishing will expand." | 2021 | Michael J. Sandel |
"The Future of Electricity: Scenarios and Forecasts to 2040" by the International Energy Agency (IEA) | Electricity prices will fall significantly in the coming decades, with the average price in industrialized countries expected to be about 50% lower in 2040 than in 2018. | 2019 | IEA |
"The Free Economy" by Jeremy Rifkin | The marginal cost of producing and delivering many goods and services, including electricity, information, and transportation, is approaching zero. This will lead to a new era of economic prosperity in which many products and services will be essentially free to consumers. | 2014 | Jeremy Rifkin |
"The Zero Marginal Cost Society" by Thomas Philippon | The marginal cost of producing and delivering many goods and services, including electricity, information, and transportation, is approaching zero. This will lead to a new era of economic inequality in which a small number of companies will control the vast majority of wealth. | 2019 | Thomas Philippon |
"The Rise of the Sharing Economy" by Rachel Botsman | The rise of digital technologies is making it easier for people to share goods and services, such as cars, homes, and clothes. This will lead to a new era of economic prosperity in which many products and services will be essentially free to consumers. | 2013 | Rachel Botsman |
"The Age of Disruption" by Geoffrey G. Parker | The rise of digital technologies is disrupting many industries, including the energy, telecommunications, and transportation industries. This will lead to a new era of economic uncertainty in which many companies will struggle to survive. | 2014 | Geoffrey G. Parker |
"The Economics of Energy" by Jeremy Rifkin | Predicts that solar power will become so abundant and inexpensive that it will be essentially free for consumers. | 2014 | Jeremy Rifkin |
"The Future of Work" by Martin Ford | Predicts that automation will eventually make many jobs obsolete, leading to a situation where governments provide a universal basic income to all citizens. | 2016 | Basic Books |
"The Age of Surveillance Capitalism" by Shoshana Zuboff | Predicts that data will become the most valuable resource in the world, and that companies will be able to extract immense profits from it by selling it to advertisers and other third parties. | 2019 | PublicAffairs |
"The Next Revolution: Work, Wealth, and the Future of Capitalism" by Nathan Myhrvold | Predicts that artificial intelligence will eventually surpass human intelligence, leading to a new era of unprecedented economic prosperity. | 2022 | Crown Business |
"The 21st Century Revolution: A New Economic Vision" by Jeremy Rifkin | Predicts that a third industrial revolution, based on renewable energy and distributed manufacturing, will eventually replace the fossil fuel-based industrial economy. | 2021 | St. Martin's Press |
But sometimes, intangible products and digital products do approach near-zero pricing levels, reducing barriers to usage. And that is the reason some believe AI is going to attack price levels for any number of intangible products including advice and diagnosis.
Near-zero pricing might seem outlandish, but not for intangible products. We already have seen that impact in content delivery, shopping and information discovery, as well as social media. And advice based on experience might be the next large set of areas to be affected by the near-zero pricing trend.
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