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Pastimes : Year 2000 and the Chip mystery

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To: cgraham who wrote ()10/3/1998 10:49:00 AM
From: cgraham   of 7
 

Ed Yardeni, economist for Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, has written an
excellent introductory book on y2k. It is posted on the Web site of the
Senate Banking Committee. This is a good document to download, read,
and mail to friends and relatives. Dr. Yardeni dismissed y2k as a
non-event in June, 1997. He has since changed his mind completely.

* * * * * * * *

"I have spent the past six months collecting as much information as
possible on Y2K. Based on what I know so far, I believe there is a 40%
risk of a worldwide recession that will last at least 12 months starting in
January 2000, and it could be as severe as the 1973-74 global recession.
That severe downturn was caused by the OPEC oil crisis, which is a
useful analogy for thinking about the potential economic consequences
of Y2K. Just as oil is a vital resource for our global economy, so is
information. If the supply of information is disrupted, many economic
activities will be impaired, if not entirely halted. . . .

I am amazed by the lack of concern about Y2K by our political and
business leaders, journalists, and the general public. The widespread
mantra I hear over and over again is "Bill Gates will fix it." The official
position of Microsoft is that this is a problem that everyone must fix on
his own. It is too big and overwhelming for even Microsoft. . . .

No single individual or corporation on this planet can solve this problem
for us. There are no quick and easy miracle drugs to make this
depressing issue go away. Y2K can be fixed, but it will require a huge
coordinated community, national, and global effort. We must also
prepare for disruptions in the event that Y2K isn't completely fixed by
the turn of the century. . . .

Over the past 12 months through July, average hourly earnings for
software programmers are up only 6.1%. This is another indicator
suggesting that companies are not panicking about their Y2K problem.
There have been many predictions that IT compensation will soar as
demand for skilled talent overwhelms supply. It could still happen, but so
far there is not even a hint of this scenario in the wage data that are
released along with the monthly employment report by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. "

yardeni.com

Take a serious look folks...the problem is even too big for Microsoft. Gates advises each company to attack the problem for themselves
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