edited by Marina
Gorbis
Large corporations, big
governments, and other centralized organizations have long determined and
dominated the way we work, access healthcare, get an education, feed ourselves,
and generally go about our lives. The economist Ronald Coase, in his famous
1937 paper “The Nature of the Firm,” provided an economic explanation for this:
Organizations lowered transaction costs, making the provision of goods and
services cheap, efficient, and reliable. Today, this organizational advantage
is rapidly disappearing. The Internet is lowering transaction costs—costs of
connection, coordination, and trade—and pointing to a future that increasingly
favors distributed sources and social solutions to some of our most immediate
needs and our most intractable problems.
As Silicon Valley
thought-leader Marina Gorbis, head of the Institute for the Future, portrays, a
thriving new relationship-driven or socialstructed economy is emerging in which
individuals are harnessing the powers of new technologies to join together and
provide an array of products and services. Examples of this changing economy
range from BioCurious, a members-run and free-to-use bio lab, to the peer-to-peer
lending platform Lending Club, to the remarkable Khan Academy, a free
online-teaching service. These engaged and innovative pioneers are filling gaps
and doing the seemingly impossible by reinventing business, education,
medicine, banking, government, and even scientific research. Based on extensive
research into current trends, she travels to a socialstructed future and
depicts an exciting vision of tomorrow.