The Rich and Their Robots Are About to Make Half the World's Jobs Disappear

tmonster

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The Rich and Their Robots Are About to Make Half the World's Jobs Disappear
Written by
Brian Merchant
Senior Editor
January 21, 2014 // 07:50 AM EST
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Image: Wikimedia

Two hugely important statistics concerning the future of employment as we know it made waves recently:

1. 85 people alone command as much wealth as the poorest half of the world.

2. 47 percent of the world's currently existing jobs are likely to be automated over the next two decades.

Combined, those two stats portend a quickly-exacerbating dystopia. As more and more automated machinery (robots, if you like) are brought in to generate efficiency gains for companies, more and more jobs will be displaced, and more and more income will accumulate higher up the corporate ladder. The inequality gulf will widen as jobs grow permanently scarce—there are only so many service sector jobs to replace manufacturing ones as it is—and the latest wave of automation will hijack not just factory workers but accountants, telemarketers, and real estate agents.

That's according to a 2013 Oxford study, which was highlighted in this week's Economist cover story. That study attempted to tally up the number of jobs that were susceptible to automization, and, surprise, a huge number were. Creative and skilled jobs done by humans were the most secure—think pastors, editors, and dentists—but just about any rote task at all is now up for automation. Machinists, typists, even retail jobs, are predicted to disappear.

And, as is historically the case, the capitalists eat the benefits. The Economist explains:

The prosperity unleashed by the digital revolution has gone overwhelmingly to the owners of capital and the highest-skilled workers. Over the past three decades, labour’s share of output has shrunk globally from 64% to 59%. Meanwhile, the share of income going to the top 1% in America has risen from around 9% in the 1970s to 22% today. Unemployment is at alarming levels in much of the rich world, and not just for cyclical reasons. In 2000, 65% of working-age Americans were in work; since then the proportion has fallen, during good years as well as bad, to the current level of 59%.

Those trends aren't just occurring in the US, either. That second stat up there is from an Oxfam report entitled Working for the Few, just out this week. It was launched in tandem with the beginning of the World Economic Forum in Davos, in an effort to get the gazillionaires attending it to consider the gravity of their wealth. It finds that "those richest 85 people across the globe share a combined wealth of £1 [trillion], as much as the poorest 3.5 billion of the world's population." Yes, you read that correctly: The 85 richest people have $1.64 trillion between them, the same amount of money as 3.5 billion of the world's less fortunate souls.

The trend extends beyond a few handfuls of the planet's most mega-tyc00ns, of course: "The wealth of the 1% richest people in the world amounts to $110tn (£60.88tn), or 65 times as much as the poorest half of the world." And they and their corporations are building robots that will have the net effect of letting them keep even more of that capital concentrated in their hands.

As the Economist piece notes, there's typically a disruptive cycle when new technologies displace old ones, and replace old jobs with new ones. But this time, that cycle is one-sided—so far, there are a lot fewer jobs being created in the new information-based economy than the old manufacturing-based one: Last year, Google, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook were worth over $1 trillion combined, but employed just 150,000 people.

All of this points towards an uncomfortable prospect: in our globalizing, technologically advanced, and inequality-laden world, we risk becoming the cyber-peasants tending (or loitering on, more likely) the feudal lawn of the machine-owning rich. Oxfam predicts incoming class struggles and social strife, and it's not hard to see why—to ensure that the 99 percent of tomorrow benefit from still-accelerating technology, we're going to have to push for policy adjustments that adapt to our mechanized world. Radical income redistribution is probably in order, even a minimum guaranteed income; ideas unlikely to prove popular to the corporate titans used to reaping outsized rewards.

We already have the agricultural, energy, and consumer technology necessary to recalibrate the world's income scheme and resource distribution to make it more equitable. So as the rich and their robots start vacuuming up the world's jobs, it's social innovation we need now, far more than any technological gain.
 

tmonster

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society changing isnt something revolutionary. Its about how we respond to those changes that leads to revolutions.
the change I'm talking about is revolutionary
it's about removing labor from identity formation of the lower class almost to the degree that function has been extinguished in the ultra rich
 

Pool_Shark

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Good now people will do something else.
 

tmonster

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Don't Fear the Robots Taking Your Job, Fear the Monopolies Behind Them

Written by
Victoria Turk
UK Editor
June 19, 2014 // 01:40 PM EST
As algorithms and automatons start to code and roll their way into our workplaces, there’s a looming sense that employment is set for a pretty major shift. Maybe not quite yet, but slowly and surely, the robots are showing themselves to be capable of taking on jobs once held by humans. They’re more accurate than us, more consistent; they run for longer, they’re satisfied with their work (or at least not unsatisfied), and they don’t kick up a fuss about a living wage.

But to worry about robots “stealing our jobs”—an oversimplified rhetoric that sounds all too familiar—is to ignore the greater potential upheaval in our economy. That future societal change was the subject of discussion at a panel last night hosted by Nesta in London, which brought figures from the fields of technology and economics together to share some of the visions conjured by their crystal balls.

Izabella Kaminska, a financial blogger at FT Alphaville, went for the jugular of the argument. “What is the extreme example of how things could all go wrong?” she asked. The answer doesn’t require looking at our robot coworkers/usurpers themselves, but to their makers. In a technological revolution, the owners of the technology will hold the power, so for Kaminska, the real worry lies with the business monopolies. As she put it, “What happens in a world where one company owns all the stuff?”

“The ultimate monopolist is actually a technologically empowered God.”
In her chapter of Nesta’s new book on the subject, Our Work Here Is Done: Visions of a Robot Economy, Kaminska talks about “Silicon Valley’s God complex” and draws parallels between the defining characteristics of how we perceive a God versus the capitalist elite. As she said in her talk, “The ultimate monopolist is actually a technologically empowered God.”

There are already a few obvious candidates for Kaminska’s tech God—the Googles and Apples that are conglomerating tech firms under their banners via dizzyingly rapid and costly acquisitions, and thereby extending their tentacles to the corners of our lives they haven’t yet locked down.

Without us realising it, perhaps it’s this fear of monopolists pulling the automotons’ strings that lies behind our suspicion of robot workers. There’s a tendency to presume that the robot uprising will automatically be a bad thing; that it will cause unemployment and hard times for the majority of the population, while lining the pockets of those at the top of the capitalist chain.

That vision is also conjured by economics writer Frances Coppola in her chapter of the book. In the free market, she explains, falling automation costs and increasing competition for the jobs that are left could push wages down to starvation levels in some countries.

“But most Western governments have minimum wage legislation that sets a floor on wages. As the cost of automation fell, therefore, it would become uneconomic in developed countries to employ humans to do jobs that could be automated, even at minimum wage levels," she said.

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L-R Izabella Kaminska, Nick Hawes, panel chair Stian Westlake
But while this scenario is often presented as somehow inevitable, she insists that it doesn't have to be. There is another, much more optimistic narrative: Robots could drastically improve our quality of life. The jobs they’re good at—the only ones they’re capable of right now—are the boring, repetitive, strenuous positions. By taking monotonous tasks off our fleshy hands, they could free us from drudgery so we can do what humans have a unique aptitude for: complete creative tasks, care for each other, and communicate.

That cooperative model is certainly more realistic right now. Birmingham University roboticist Nick Hawes brought the panel down to Earth from daydreams of a robot-run world by reminding everyone quite how bad robots are at most things. They’re good at monitoring, like the robot security guard I met last week, but they’re terrible at dealing with any amount of uncertainty, or understanding pretty much anything.

“Don’t get carried away with ideas of humanoid robots walking around doing stuff,” he said.

But the limitations of robots are what Coppola thought could lead to a “wonderful opportunity” rather than the economic disaster many fear. “In the post-technological world, the work of humans will be understanding each other and, with robots, caring for each other,” she said. (In her view, robots would take on the physical side of care.)

She imagined a hair salon of the future, where robots would deliver the perfect cut, but human staff would fulfill the most important role—understanding the needs of their clients.

But for that more utopian future to materialise, she emphasised the need not only for an attitude shift away from the idea that work means producing stuff, but also for political action. That was a call echoed by techno-economist Carlota Perez, who presented a compelling argument that we can have a new golden age—if we make the right economic moves.

We’ll need strategies to shift jobs into the fields where humans outperform robots, and tax and welfare schemes that take the new economy into account. Ultimately, the impact of the robot revolution won’t just be down to the technology itself, but how we use it—or more importantly, whether the people using it is in fact a “we,” or a limited, elitist “they.”

In any case, if you don’t like the way things are headed, don’t blame imagined robotic overlords. Blame real human ones.
 

Ethnic Vagina Finder

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We are slaves to technology. I'm typing on an iphone right now instead of doing something meaningful or productive. Facebook has not only changed how we communicate but helped make a small few millionaires and billionaires out of nothing. Most people are mindless thoughtless sheep that have no original thoughts or ideas. We live in a reality tv instant gratification world and things will only get worse.
 

the cac mamba

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someone has to make the robots :ehh: granted that number is an incredibly small percentage of jobs that would be eliminated
 

Mr. Somebody

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I went to Chiles and you can now pay with a kiosk machine thats At the table. I asked the waitresss, so we can pay here? :gladbron: and she says

*yea they're trying to get rid of us* I was like :ohhh:

Once they figure out how to deliver food to tables without people, Game over.

Sadly friends, this also means they plan on killing a great deal of the population because what are all of these jobless friends going to do.
 

Mr. Somebody

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Another hard fact of reality is how population has basically been increased because of a lack of technology. Would less people have been born if many corporations didnt set up shop in areas where they were nothing, providing opportunities for friends to start families.

When these companies move or fold you have a town that has now prospered under the corporation but now that the companies gone, where do these individuals go. How sustainable is this practice in the long term.

Its so demonic, friends. :sitdown:
 
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