Apple briefly world’s most valuable business: What it means

Last year, Apple surpassed Microsoft to become the most valuable technology company in the world. For a brief instant yesterday, Apple became the most valuable public company in any industry in terms of market capitalisation exceeding Exxon Mobil by more than USD5 billion. The market closed after Exxon regained the lead with a market cap of USD$348.3 billion versus Apple’s USD346.7 billion.

The market upheavals this week revealed something interesting about the world today. While Exxon fuels industry and Microsoft fuels information systems, Apple produces the stuff that skims the money cream off the top of industry and information systems — media consumption. In short, Apple, a company that makes products that induce consumption represents the future of growth in the US economy.

SUPPORT INDEPENDENT SOCIAL COMMENTARY!
Subscribe to our Substack community GRP Insider to receive by email our in-depth free weekly newsletter. Opt into a paid subscription and you'll get premium insider briefs and insights from us.
Subscribe to our Substack newsletter, GRP Insider!
Learn more

Interestingly, Apple’s hottest selling devices — tablet computers and smart touch-screen phones — are designed more for browsing content and less for producing it. One of its major cash cows, the iTunes store, is a delivery channel for pure “intellectual capital” hungrily consumed by users of these browsing devices.

Perhaps it is no wonder that the US is belleaguered by persistent unemployment — one that hits blue collar and low-skilled workers the hardest. The United States remains unchallenged when it comes to output of ephemeral cultural products — the stuff (music, movies, and literature) that gets pumped into peoples’ iPods, iPhones, and iPads. But in terms of producing (read manufacturing) physically tangible stuff, well, we all know who is losing and who is gaining in that department. The intellectual elite win and win more while the majority average lose and will lose more.

Perhaps the US’s former colony, the Philippines, represents the proverbial fruit that does not fall too far out from under the shadow of the proverbial tree.

The curves that describe Apple’s rise and Exxon’s and Microsoft’s tapering off illustrates that fundamental shift in what underpins the value of the US economy. It could be the slow poison that may increasingly be accounting for the expected persistence of unemployment even in the most optimistic recovery scenarios. As US industry fails to create employment for a people who originally achieved greatness making stuff it is ramping up on technologies and opportunities for people to “create” content (and devices to deliver it in increasingly personal ways) that fuels escapism and distraction in the very people who need to get back on the ball.

Indeed, in light of findings that reveals how kids who use Facebook go mental and don’t do well in school, perhaps it is time we consider the possibility that America’s pinning its hopes for recovery and employment generation in these “new media” industries may be an exercise in digging itself deeper in the hole it already finds itself stuck in.

2 Replies to “Apple briefly world’s most valuable business: What it means”

  1. Apple Computer Company; started the Personal Computer
    revolution. It was started by some Geeks, from their garage in California. They had seen that the large computing machines, are too expensive. So, they designed a small one, affordable to all. The Integrated Circuit, or the Silicon Wafer Microchip, made this possible…it usered the Age of Digi-Techs and Information Technology…Finally to this tweeting and blogging technology…

  2. So called “experts” declares that the PC is dead or is going the way of the typewriter…I personally don’t think so…I mean…we still use the PC to develop applications for these so called “new technologies”…can one really produce anything really “productive” with one’s smartphone or tablet?…I sure cannot…even…I still prefer a desktop over a laptop because desktop are so much more powerful than a laptop…albeit some laptops specs are almost nearing the desktop specs…I mainly use this “new technologies” for on-the-go social networking and digitized book reading… 🙂

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.