Patience, in Landes's sense, is not passive waiting. It is ferocious activity committed to outcomes the actors will not see. The Meiji leaders sent delegations across the world and recruited foreign advisors not because they expected immediate returns but because they understood that institutional transformation required sustained, active, decades-long investment. The Prussians after Jena in 1807 built schools they would not live to see produce their graduates. The patient society is characterized not by slowness of action but by length of time horizon — the willingness to sustain commitment through the inevitable setbacks, failures, and political pressures that long-term institutional investment produces.
The opposite — the impatient society — is visible everywhere in the AI transition. Companies deploy AI at the maximum speed the technology permits, without investing in organizational capacity to maintain what they build. Governments announce national AI strategies focused on capability development without equivalent investment in the educational and institutional infrastructure that determines whether capability is directed wisely. Investors reward growth and punish the slower, less visible investments in institutional quality that growth depends on. The pressure to move fast is structural: built into capital markets, political cycles, and organizational culture.
Landes would observe that this impatience is the precise configuration that has historically produced concentrated gains, widespread displacement, and institutional crises requiring decades to resolve. The patient response is less visible but more consequential: Finland investing in educational quality that compounds over generations; Singapore designing AI governance that addresses both supply and demand; the organizations — less celebrated, less frequently profiled — that invest in institutional knowledge management and in the slow work of building human capacity on which AI capability depends.
The concept is developed across Landes's work but receives its fullest articulation in The Wealth and Poverty of Nations, particularly in discussions of Japanese modernization and the long-term institutional investments that distinguished successful from stagnant industrializers.
Active patience. Not slowness but length of time horizon — sustained institutional activity committed to outcomes beyond the actors' own lifetimes.
Compounding returns. Institutional investments compound across generations; each investment makes subsequent investments more productive, producing exponential rather than linear returns.
Impatience as consumption. Impatient societies consume institutional capital by deploying capability without investing in the infrastructure that sustains it.
AI-age application. The mismatch between AI's monthly capability advances and multi-year institutional construction is the defining challenge, and only patient societies will navigate it successfully.