Essentially saying that Amdahl's Law dominates. Speed up part of a process; its total time taken will be dominated by the parts that can't be sped up. In this case the process is the economy, and time is money.
I look from a macroeconomic point of view. To a first approximation, GDP is household spending (and the reason for the other parts existing is also household spending. No comapny invests unless it expects to sell more)
Again to a first approximation, household spending is wages.
So saying "GDP will rise 20% per year" is approximately equivalent to saying "total wages will rise 20% per year".
Essentially saying that Amdahl's Law dominates. Speed up part of a process; its total time taken will be dominated by the parts that can't be sped up. In this case the process is the economy, and time is money.
I look from a macroeconomic point of view. To a first approximation, GDP is household spending (and the reason for the other parts existing is also household spending. No comapny invests unless it expects to sell more)
Again to a first approximation, household spending is wages.
So saying "GDP will rise 20% per year" is approximately equivalent to saying "total wages will rise 20% per year".
That ... seems unlikely.