
New Books in Science, Technology, and Society Carl Benedikt Frey, "How Progress Ends: Technology, Innovation, and the Fate of Nations" (Princeton UP, 2025)
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Nov 19, 2025 Carl Benedikt Frey, Dieter Schwarz Associate Professor at the Oxford Internet Institute, delves into the dynamics of technology and societal growth. He challenges the myth of perpetual progress, highlighting how historical contexts influence paths to prosperity. Frey investigates why some nations flourish while others stagnate, examining factors like bureaucratic constraints in China and innovation spurts in Europe and America. He warns of potential stagnation in the U.S. and China, emphasizing that AI's promise hinges on fostering competition and adaptability.
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Fragmentation Fueled European Innovation
- European political fragmentation created space for mobility of skills and ideas.
- Fragmentation plus cultural unity let innovations diffuse across competing states.
Prussia Built Managerial Capacity
- Prussia invested heavily in schooling and technical institutions to support industrial catch-up.
- Civil servants moved into industry, seeding managerial talent for firms like Siemens.
U.S. Growth Relied On Decentralized Invention
- U.S. 19th-century growth rested on institutions that encouraged independent inventors and patent markets.
- Public-private partnerships overcame weak federal state capacity to build crucial infrastructure like railroads.




