
Intelligent Manufacturing May 1996 Vol. 2 No.
5
The Road to Cyberspace
Dana Mead, chairman and CEO of Tenneco (Houston, Tex.), as well as the chairman
of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), delivered a keynote
address at the IPC '96 show on "Growth and the Road to Cyberspace."
Beginning by taking note of the advanced capabilities of virtual reality,
Mead pointed out that there will nevertheless always be a need, ultimately,
for something real -- an end product will have to be manufactured at some
point during a virtual transaction. "How we get to this emerging cyberspace
economy is as important as simply getting there," he cautioned, since
this evolution will require a lot of money and a lot of workers.
Taking a decidedly pro-business (and almost, by definition, pro-Republican)
point of view, Mead's remarks were highly critical of President Clinton's
administration. "One of the great mysteries is why the United States
-- the most powerful, innovative and productive country in the world --
settles for an economy that grows at a mere 2% per year," Mead lamented.
He observed that the cautionary fears preached by Robert Reich, secretary
of labor, that faster growth will cause rampant inflation is "economic
psychobabble." Continuing in that vein, Mead noted that, "Conspiracy
junkies see growth as some kind of evil plot to redistribute income and
turn the U.S. into a plutocracy," which he believes is utter nonsense.
One of the surest ways of fighting inflation is globalization, he explained.
Tenneco, for instance, is a globally-based manufacturer of construction
equipment, automotive parts, packaging materials and chemical products,
as well as a supplier of natural gas products. Most manufacturing companies,
however, are late in realizing how important it is to think in terms of
a global economy. Part of the problem, Mead believes, is the misuse and
misreading of economic data.
"We need a tax system that will encourage investment rather than consumption,
and right now we have the opposite," Mead said. Furthermore, "we
need a new covenant between business, labor and government."
While companies can no longer guarantee their employees a lifetime job,
"we can strive to ensure lifetime employment for an employee, by concentrating
on training and reeducating our workers." By the same token, workers
need to recognize the fluid nature of the workplace by taking a proactive
interest in their own careers to remain vital in the workforce.
"The transition to the cyber-economy isn't going to be smooth,"
Mead concluded, "since it will pass through every shop floor, union
hall, board room and government agency in the coming years." It is
imperative, then, that manufacturers be encouraged to innovate rather than
be hamstrung by government-imposed barriers to healthy growth.
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