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Page last updated January 7, 2000
There is a lot of nonsense floating around in the media and on the net about
the Year 2000 problem and its impact on the country/economy/world. This page
is an accumulation of predicitions, dire warnings and concerns extracted from
various sources. Some of these people will be right - most will be wrong.
Only time will tell.
Information presented here is grouped into four categories depending on the
impact forseen by the individuals quoted below:
- Year 2000 will have no impact
- Year 2000 will have a mild impact
- Year 2000 will have a major impact
- Year 2000 will be an absolute disaster
As time goes by, certain Y2K predictions become testable. We are able to
compare the predicition to reality. The Y2K Reality Check
provides a comparison of Y2K predicitions with reality. Additionally, more and more Y2K
experts will be changing their opinions.
If you're interested in the opinion of a computer professional with 28+ years
programming experience, check out my opinion.
Or, check out Dennis Behreandt's opinion.
If after reading all this you're still worried,
the Y2K Survival Kit should get you safely past the
turn of the century.
Year 2000 will have no impact
"Solving the Year 2000 problem is a simple software task. If an organization
cannot handle the Year 2000 problem, it is a dangerous organization indeed;
avoid it!"
Nicholas Zvegintzov, Software Maintenance News
"I think the checks are going to be fine."
Kathy Adams, assistant deputy commissioner for systems at Social Security Administration
"The truth is that Jan. 1, 2000, will come and go, and the world and its
computers will continue working about as well as before, with perhaps
a few minor mishaps, and you will find yourself wondering what
generated the big excitement."
Nicholas Zvegintzov, IntellectualCapitol
"The examination has revealed that the [Air Traffic Control System] will
transition the millennium in a routine manner,"
Jane F. Garvey, FAA Administrator. 07/21/98
"Computers play an extremely important role in the production of food
from factories -- many of which are automated -- down to the distribution of
products. We have been working on this problem for the past five to
seven years. I think that we've put a tremendous amount of resources into
fixing this and we're going to be ready. ... Don't panic. There are not going
to be empty food shelves January 1st, 2000. The trucks are going to be
rolling."
William James, Grocery Manufacturers of America
"There is a lot of noise about Y2K, but in the end it will largely be a
nonevent for most small businesses. Small businesses won't crash. Most
have gotten into the habit of upgrading their software at least every year."
Frank Marra, president of FMA International, a Saratoga,
Calif., systems integration firm specializing in small
business.
"The Social Security system is now 100 percent compliant with our
standards and safeguards for the year 2000. The system works. It is secure, and
therefore older Americans can feel more secure."
Bill Clinton, 12/28/98
"The Department of Defense will be able to protect the people of the
United States and its allies in 351 days and 12 hours. There is not a question
about that. We will be 100 percent ready by the end of the year."
Deputy Defense Secretary John Hamre,
01/13/99
"As it becomes clear our national infrastructure will hold, overreaction
becomes one of the biggest remaining problems."
John Koskinen, chairman of the President's Commission on
Year 2000 Conversion, New York Times,
02/09/99
"But it will not, contrary to the ravings found in some of the media
reports and in many places on the Internet, be The End Of the World As We Know
It. Through hard work and effort, we've broken the back of Y2K."
Peter De Jager, 03/99
"I consider (Y2K) a complete ruse promulgated by consulting companies to
drum up business. I think the problem is way overblown. This is a good example of the
press piling on. Y2K is the bogeyman."
--Jim Clark, co-founder of Netscape Communications Corp.,
quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, May 3, 1999
"I'm not concerned about it.
Actually, one of the biggest dangers we face over the next six months is
the press hyping Y2K and turning it into a crisis situation for the
public."
--Jim Barksdale, former Netscape Communications CEO,
quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, May 3, 1999
"Worried? Not at all. I think it's entirely invented by a division of
Microsoft."
--Robert Kotick, chairman and CEO of game developer
Activision, quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, May 3, 1999
"We have not one, but two, millennium bugs: one in our computer, the
other in our culture. If computer alone, it is a relatively minor problem.
Human irratationality exacerbates problems. The media needs something to
fixate on after Monica, and it's Y2K."
--Paul Saffo, director, Institute for the Future,
quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, May 3, 1999
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Year 2000 will have a mild impact
"[M]ost companies are two years into their year 2000 efforts and still have
a year and a half to finish them. ... Microsoft, Latin America, and communism
all changed radically in a lot less time. ... The very complexity and
dispersion of these systems is, in fact, insurance against a complete
shutdown of commerce when the millennium starts."
Merrill Lynch, Y2K: Implications of Investors, 07/09/98
"The vast majority of customers are not going to have a problem using
[Microsoft] Office well into the next century. You can be pretty sure that
all the work we're doing will be taking everything into consideration."
Andrew Dixon, Microsoft Office Product Manager
"Electrical systems are operated such that the loss of one facility, or
in some cases two or three facilities, will not cause cascading outages.
Y2K poses the threat that failures . . . could result in stressing the
electric system to the point of a cascading outage over a large area. I
must stress this possibility is extremely low, but conceivable."
Michel Gent, North American Electric Reliability Council
"This is not a discrete event where people come to work and half the world
shuts down. I don't think we're in for a dislocation. I think a recession
caused by this is extremely unlikely. I quite look forward to the year 2000.
[Most companies] will ring in the millennium without catastrophe. And
benefits of the year 2000 shakeout ... will be with us for a long time
to come."
Derek Slater of CIO Magazine, September, 1998
"I don't expect the air travel industry to see major catastrophes.
Safety's not an issue, inconvenience is.
Thomas Windmuller, director of Project Year 2000 for the
International Air Transport Association (IATA).
"I still think we will have brownouts. I don't know how long they will
last. I don't know where they will hit, and I don't know how severe they will
be. The very nature of the problem indicates that we cannot get through this
with complete, absolute, 100 percent assurance, although there are people in
power companies that are now telling me that's what we can depend on.
"My own sense of the thing says, no, there's got to be some brownouts.
There will be some interruptions, but the power grid will not fail. Don't go
out and dig up your backyard and bury propane tanks, or go out and buy your very
own generator, because I think we will have power,"
Sen. Bob Bennett, (Republican, Utah)
"We may see 12 months where people are distracted getting their things ready,
but I agree with the general sentiment here, that of the range that
people have thought about in terms of the problems that will occur, it
will be below the middle of the panic that some people have suggested."
Bill Gates, February 1999
"I do not forecast a lot of catacyclismic events, but I think there will be a lot
of small things that will go wrong related to basically not having gotten totally
prepared for the year 2K."
Goran Lindahl, chief executive officer of ABB Asea Brown Boveri
"Yes, there will be problems. Some banks will be unable to process
checks; in more than a few places, factories will find machines don't work as
they should; and there will be several power outages. But worldwide, the
result will be no worse than an inconvenience - on the order of a major winter
snowstorm that disrupts our plans for a few days."
--Herbert W. Lovelace, Information Week
Online, 02/01/99
"Even though we don't expect a total collapse of our infrastructure or
simultaneous devastating effects, it is possible for Y2K-induced effects
... to strike numerous communities across the country at the same time."
--Phyllis Mann, president-elect of the International
Association of Emergency Managers, 03/22/99
"It now appears that a number of countries will experience Year 2000
failures in key infrastructures such as electric power,
telecommunications, and transportation."
--John Koskinen, White House Year 2000
coordinator, 04/23/99 Mr. Koskinen is all over the map on Y2K
Return to Top of Page
"I'm not concerned that power will go out and planes will fall from the
sky. There could be hiccups in international commerce, but not a complete
meltdown."
--Internet co-founder Vint Cerf,
quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, Monday, May 3, 1999
"It's entirely possible that we could have significant power outages [as
a result of Y2K]. The problem is, [utility comapnies] don't know. And another problem is
that they don't know how to test for Y2K."
--Donald Hodel, former Secretary of Energy,
quoted in Word Net Daily
05/10/1999.
"There's enough ambiguity to cause some mess, but it's nothing worth
losing our head over."
--William Vroman, University of Baltimore Information
Systems Research Center, 07/31/99
"What I really expect is that things will shake out somewhere in the
middle. In other words, I anticipate that things will be worse that we
are being told but not quite as bad as we fear. If nothing much happens,
I will be delighted -- and truly surprised. (These kinds of surprises I
can handle!) But if it's worse than I expect, I will be disappointed but
prepared. How about you?"
--©1999 Michael S. Hyatt,
World Net Daily, 12/30/99
Year 2000 will have a major impact
"[I am worried] about the very real prospects of power shortages as a
consequence of the millennial date change."
Sen. Robert Bennett (R-Utah), June, 1998
"Pay attention to the things that are vulnerable in your life and make
contingency plans. ... Supermarkets could be closed for a few days because
supplies may be disrupted. ... I wouldn't book a vacation on an airplane to
a foreign country [on Dec. 31, 1999]"
Sen. Robert Bennett (R-Utah), 07/15/98
"When we get to Jan. 1, 1999, there will be so many systems that deal with
one-year projections of dates that we'll have real fireworks. Maybe
that'll get people serious, but unfortunately, if that's what
it took, by then it'll be too late.
"It's hard to believe it could cause this much trouble. Second, it has no
business value. It's hard for management to divert funds from more strategic
initiatives to fix this. And on top of the whole thing is this cloak of silence,
being concerned of the impact of talking about what's going on."
Jim Woodward, senior vice president of Cap Gemini's TransMillenium Services Unit, 12/19/97
See The Y2k Reality Check concerning this
prediction.
"The study, conducted by Triaxsys Research LLC of Missoula, Mont., also found
the total year 2000 expenditure by the 250 companies is expected to be about
$33 billion, but only 20 percent of that total has been spent so far, another
indication most companies are moving too slowly to address the problem."
Bruce Caldwell, InformationWeek, 04/22/98
"[I]t is estimated that about 57 percent of applications at U.S. companies
will not be repaired before date problems begin to cause failures ..."
Tim Wilson, InternetWeek, 04/06/98
"What if the electricity goes out? What if there is a disruption in internal
or external communications? What if users or customers get irrational data?
You may have to hire clerks and go back to the manual review process of the 1930s."
Aleks List, president of Transcend 2000, 04/06/98
"Many agencies are behind schedule. At the current pace, it is clear that
not all mission critical systems will be fixed in time. Much more action is
needed to ensure that federal agencies satisfactorily mitigate Year 2000 risks
to avoid debilitating consequences."
General Accounting Office, 04/30/98
"[There will be a] fairly significant
breakdown of the infrastructure across the country."
Michael P. Harden, Y2K Exptert, 07/21/98
"Any firm that has ignored the Y2K problem should be liable for stupidity."
Jamie Love, Ralph Nader's Consumer Project on Technology
"By the time the Labor Department gets around to expanding its database
of retired programmers, it will be too late; again, it would have been a
great idea in 1995, but not in mid-1998. "In any case,
the problem is not the shortage of programmers, but an unwillingness to
allocate resources: Throughout most of business and government today,
only 20 to 30 percent of the programming work force has been assigned to
the Y2K problem. If an organization is really serious about Y2K, then it
will declare a moratorium on its other development projects and assign a
larger percentage of its existing work force to Y2K repairs."
Ed Yourdon, author of Time Bomb 2000
"[C]atastrophic failures will not occur everywhere in January 2000 ...
failures in less developed countries, smaller companies, and companies
with high global dependencies will cause a negative impact to the world
economy."
GartnerGroup research director Lou Marcoccio, 08/05/98
"Many year 2000 contingency and disaster recovery plans cover only a
narrow period around January 1, 2000. However, we believe the majority of
failures will not occur during this time."
Lou Marcoccio, quoted in CNET News, 08/17/99
"It is highly unlikely that all of the Medicare systems will be
compliant in time to ensure the delivery of uninterrupted benefits and
services."
U.S. General Accounting Office, 09/28/98
"This predicament is disturbing. The results show that even at this late
stage, the majority of small and medium-sized enterprises [in the U.K.]
are still not taking the year 2000 issue seriously.
We predict that at least 10 percent of these companies will go into
liquidation as a result of system failure. This will result in the loss
of 291,072 jobs."
Richard Coppel, Chief Executive of Prove It 2000
"Airlines are undoubtedly working very hard to fix their systems,
but to an extent it is largely a problem that will be decided by
insurance. If insurance companies say they will not cover an airline for
a year 2000 problem, airlines will not be able to cover themselves."
Andy Kyte, analyst at Gartner Group, Reuters 11/03/98
"European governments and public sector organizations have only spent
between five and 10 percent of what it needs to fix their systems.
The public sector is the biggest danger here. They're not doing the work
at all. ... Hospitals, government procurement, defense procurement,
welfare, are areas where we'll see disruption from the end of this year.
The Dutch, Swedes and the Irish have done a good job, but very few European
governments can stand up to scrutiny. They've been saying a lot but not
really doing much."
Andy Kyte, analyst at Gartner Group, Reuters 11/03/98
"The millennium computer problem is going to start manifesting itself as
we cross into 1999. There will also be clusters of problems at key dates
like the end of the first quarter."
Matthew Hotle, analyst at Gartner Group, Reuters 11/03/98
See The Y2k Reality Check concerning this
prediction.
"It is now clear that a large number of Federal computing systems will
simply not be prepared for January 2000. At the same time, the utilities
industry, the financial services industry, the telecommunications industry, vital
modes of transportation, and other indispensable industrial sectors are all at
risk."
"It is time for the President to declare that the Year 2000 Problem is a
National Priority. If sufficient progress is not made by an intermediate
deadline, he may even need to escalate the Year 2000 Problem to a
National Emergency."
--Rep. Steve Horn, (Republican, California)
"Our latest Millennium Index shows that UK organisations have
re-assessed the amount of work to do and realised they will not fix all their systems.
They've therefore begun to focus on business continuity planning."
Chris Webster, head of Year 2000 services
"We're concerned about the potential disruption of power grids,
telecommunications and banking services, among other possible fallout,
especially in countries already torn by political tensions,"
--Phillip Dodd, a Unisys Y2K expert, quoted in
The Bangkok Post
"By almost all surveys or measures, health care is far behind other
industries in planning and preparation for the Year 2000."
Joel Ackerman, 2000 Solutions Institute,
01/04/98
"There's sufficient information for people to say there's a substantial
risk of disruption."
Charles Halpern, president of the Nathan E. Cummings
Foundation, New York Times, 02/09/99
"Make no mistake this problem will affect us all individually and
collectively in very profound ways. ... It will indeed impact individual
businesses and the global economy. In some cases, lives could even be at
stake."
Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R-Utah, and Christopher J. Dodd,
D-Conn.
"The committee has no data to suggest that the United States will
experience nation-wide social or economic collapse, but we believe that
disruptions will occur that in some cases will be significant. The
international situation will be more disturbing. Those who suggest that
it will be nothing more than a 'bump in the road' are simply
misinformed."
Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R-Utah, and Christopher J. Dodd,
D-Conn.
"At midnight, Dec. 31, 1999, millions of computers throughout the world
will begin to crash. The lights will go out in many cities around the
globe where the computers that run the electric power grid fail to make
the transition to the next century. Despite years of warnings many
government agencies and businesses may find themselves unable to
function as their essential computer programs either shut down or
produce false data. The stock market and banking system are as essential
to modern life as the government itself. The failure to correct this
massive problem before the Year 2000 deadline may threaten our jobs, our
safety, our food and our finances."
--Grant Jeffrey
"For the first few weeks of 2000, you'll probably see gas prices shoot
up drastically. I would not be surprised to see a 50 percent rise in prices."
--Bruce Webster, Co-chair, Washington D.C. Year 2000
Group, 03/15/99
"I expect the stock market to react and begin a downward spiral, and the
number of Y2K optimists will continue to dwindle."
--Loren Jacobs, speaking of April 1, 1999, quoted in
WordNetDaily 03/30/99
See The Y2k Reality Check concerning this
prediction.
"That's [April 1, 1999] when Canada and New York State begin their fiscal year that
will, of course, include dates beyond Year 2000. As a result, planning
systems, especially budgets that haven't been repaired, will fail as they attempt
to process Y2K dates. ... With New York City being the world's media
capital, such tabs as the New York Daily News, will be yelling: 'Horror!
Disaster!'"
Kaye Corbett, WorldNetDaily
03/30/99
See The Y2k Reality Check concerning this
prediction.
"The script for Y2K is all wrong. Instead of Y2K failures occurring at
midnight on Dec. 31, they will be spread over a 30-month period that
will begin in July"
Gartner Group, attributed in Minneapolis Star
Tribune, 04/18/99
"[T]he causes [for Y2K failures to begin in July] will be forecasting
software that looks six months into the future, the beginning of new
fiscal years for many corporations and some date-related anomalies in
software code."
Lou Marcoccio, Gartner Group, attributed in
Minneapolis Star Tribune, 04/18/99
"The number of Y2K failures will increase further in October as
forecasting software that looks three months ahead runs up against the Jan. 1, 2000,
date and still more companies begin new fiscal years"
Lou Marcoccio, Gartner Group, attributed in
Minneapolis Star Tribune, 04/18/99
"25 percent of Y2K computer failures will occur in 1999, 55 percent will
occur in 2000 and 15 percent will occur in 2001. The other 5 percent
occurred before 1999."
Gartner Group, attributed in Minneapolis Star
Tribune, 04/18/99
"We are undoubtedly heading for an economic slowdown. In my view the
findings of this survey point to an extraordinary position where about 300 of the
UK's largest businesses appear to be playing Russian roulette with the
Millennium Bug. Many of those companies are unlikely to make it and the prospect
of serious disruption is a reality.
--Robin Guenier, Executive director of Taskforce 2000
"Whether by bombing a jetliner or attacking crowds in (New York's) Times
Square, it's almost certain the Year 2000 will be ushered in with a
major terrorist attack. ... [There will be a] violent upsurge in guerilla
violence [against America]."
--Neil Livingstone, ex-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff
"In spite of all these clues the only thing a rational person can
conclude is that somehow, someway, it is highly probable that
something bad will happen either because of Y2K or on behalf of Y2K. Problems
and violence will either be born of lunacy or rationalized planning, of a
foreign or domestic nature, and on either a small or large scale, but you can
bet -- say the experts -- that something will happen."
Jon E. Dougherty,
World Net Daily, 07/12/99
[Empasis in the original.]
"[T]he global picture that is slowly emerging is cause for concern ...
Our assessments suggest that the global community is likely to
experience varying degrees of Y2K-related failures in every sector, in every
region and at every economic level.
"Y2K-related disruptions in the international flow of goods and
services are likely ... a breakdown in any part of the supply chain
would have a serious impact on the U.S. and world economies."
--Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers, State Department inspector
general, 07/20/99
"Problems will start to bubble up and by the second quarter [of 2000],
there will be a big mess."
--Lynn Edelson, principal at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP's
operational and systems risk management group in Los Angeles, 08/02/99,
quoted in Techweb.com
"Severe long- and short-term disruptions to supply chains are likely to
occur [due to Y2K-related system failures]. ...
The Y2K problem still has the potential to be very disruptive,
necessitating continued, intensive preparation in the time remaining,"
--U.S. Senate Committe on the Year 2000 Technology Problem,
09/22/99
"I'd love to say the Y2K optimism sweeping our land is justified -- but
I can't. The plain facts about Y2K-readiness paint a much more somber
picture. I'm afraid Y2K optimism is based mostly on wishful thinking. And I'm
afraid millions of citizens will be shocked -- shocked! -- to discover early
next year that politicians and business leaders have been lying to them about Y2K."
--Michael Hyatt,
World Net Daily, 12/07/99
Return to Top of Page
Year 2000 will be an absolute disaster
"We are heading for a disaster greater than anything the world has
experienced since the bubonic plague of the mid-14th century."
Gary North, "Blind Man's Bluff in the Year 2000"
"[Y2K will] be known as the greatest social, political, and financial
crisis mankind has faced since the great plagues of the 14th century
that wiped out one-third of Europe."
Bruce Tippery, Gary North's publisher
"[T]he Y2K problem is systemic. It cannot be fixed."
Gary North, "Blind Man's Bluff in the Year 2000"
"Warning: Fiscal years arrive before calendar years do. Fiscal years for
most states roll over on July 1. Fiscal year 99 rolls over on July 1,
1998 in most state budgets. If just one state shuts down because its
computers are programmed to read 99 as end of run, the bank run will
begin in that state no later than July 2, 1998. It will spread to the whole
world when depositors realize that the entire payments system - and most
governments - will shut down no later than the year 2000."
Gary North, "Remnant Review"
See The Y2k Reality Check concerning this
prediction.
"If we don't have electricity, nothing else works. On New Year's Eve 1999,
let me suggest three places you don't want to be: in an elevator, in an
airplane, or in a hospital."
Sen. Christopher Dodd, (D-Conn.), 06/12/98
"Gartner said it predicts 20 percent will still have not undertaken any
efforts by 2000, either because they have little or no automation, or
will try to 'ride it out,' according to Lou Marcoccio, an analyst
with Gartner Group, in Stamford, Conn."
Bruce Caldwell, InformationWeek, 04/09/98
"Some government departments are so far behind schedule in their efforts
to prepare computer systems for the 21st century that they may not be
done until 2014"
Andy Patrizio, TechWeb, 03/09/98
"Russia is extremely vulnerable to the Year 2000 problem and an accidental
launch is possible. ... If the date is used somewhere to track an
incoming missile and the date shifts to 0000000 for a brief moment, there is
a division by zero--an extremely high value--that fools the system into
thinking there is a high probability of an attack in progress. This error in
calculation might cause the computer to identify the blip on
the screen as a rocket."
Sergey Fradkov, Wall Street software
"Currently I believe there is a 70 percent chance of a global
recession as severe as the one that occurred in the 1973-74 oil
crisis. Just as that recession was caused by the disruption
in the supply of oil, I believe the disruption in the flow of
information could be equally as disruptive."
Edward Yardeni, chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities,
North America, 08/19/98
[Wrong by his own admission, 01/05/2000]
"It is increasingly evident that an appreciable part of the nation's
infrastructure could be adversely affected in some way by what is
commonly referred to as the Y2K problem. Considering the
possibilities of a large-scale disruption of governmental, commercial
and other routine daily activities, it is certain that the National
Guard will be among the first organizations activated to assist in the
revitalization of the nation's computer dependent infrastructure."
--Maj. General Edward Philbin, executive director of the
National Guard Association, 10/02/98
"We'll need to do this soon because if we're going to recommend people
buy generators, they'll need to get their orders in soon. Already, most
manufacturers are backlogged. If you call to order long-term food storage
supplies, you'll find yourself on a waiting list. A warning is no good if it's
given too late to do anything."
Larry Burkett, Christian Financial Concepts
"The more I uncovered, the more I realized how extraordinarily
vulnerable the system is. The writing is on the wall: it is not only possible,
but probable that there are going to be food shortages."
Geri Guidetti, biologist and Y2k alarmist
"Americans cannot escape the inevitable risks of Y2K. Like characters in
The Decameron fleeing a medieval plague, they can run to the hills if they
want, as some doomsayers are doing, but the bug eventually will catch them,
frustrate their best-laid plans and cost them dearly for years to come."
--Duncan A. MacDonald,
IntellectualCapital.COM, 12/03/98
Duncan A. MacDonald is a retired general counsel for
Citibank's card programs for Europe and North America. He is
currently advising banks on Y2K, alternate dispute resolution, antitrust
law, privacy policy and plain language.
"Based on what I learned at DistribuTECH '98, I am convinced that there
is a 100 percent chance that a major portion of the domestic electrical
infrastructure will be lost as a result of the Year 2000 computer and
embedded systems problem. The industry is fiddling whilst the
infrastructure burns."
--Rick Cowles, reports on the electric utility
industry
Link to Gary North's site for lots of gloom and doom
Year 2000 scare talk.
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