Statistical Basis for Predicting Technological Progress
Bela Nagy, J. Doyne Farmer, Quan M. Bui, Jessika E. Trancik

TL;DR
This study rigorously tests six models predicting technological progress using a large database, finding Wright's law performs best and revealing exponential growth patterns in production and costs, which make different models nearly indistinguishable.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive empirical comparison of models predicting technological progress, confirming the predictive power of Wright's law and identifying exponential production growth.
Findings
Wright's law yields the most accurate forecasts.
Moore's law performs nearly as well as Wright's law.
Production tends to grow exponentially, unifying different progress models.
Abstract
Forecasting technological progress is of great interest to engineers, policy makers, and private investors. Several models have been proposed for predicting technological improvement, but how well do these models perform? An early hypothesis made by Theodore Wright in 1936 is that cost decreases as a power law of cumulative production. An alternative hypothesis is Moore's law, which can be generalized to say that technologies improve exponentially with time. Other alternatives were proposed by Goddard, Sinclair et al., and Nordhaus. These hypotheses have not previously been rigorously tested. Using a new database on the cost and production of 62 different technologies, which is the most expansive of its kind, we test the ability of six different postulated laws to predict future costs. Our approach involves hindcasting and developing a statistical model to rank the performance of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovation Diffusion and Forecasting · Climate Change Policy and Economics · Economic Growth and Productivity
