What To Do After Robots Take Your Job
sarahnaomi writes In 2013, researchers Carl Frey and Michael Osborne of the Oxford Martin School dropped the bombshell that 47 percent of US jobs were at risk of computerisation. Since then, they've made similar predictions for the UK, where they say 35 percent of jobs are at high risk. So what will our future economy look like? "My predictions have enormously high variance," Osborne told me when I asked if he was optimistic. "I can imagine completely plausible, incredibly positive scenarios, but they're only about as probable as actually quite dystopian futures that I can imagine."
In a new report produced as part of a programme supported by Citi, he and Frey outline how increased innovation—read: automation—could lead to stagnation.
In a new report produced as part of a programme supported by Citi, he and Frey outline how increased innovation—read: automation—could lead to stagnation.
plastic explosives
I am sick and tired of Luddites that claim robots will steal all the jobs.
Jobs are not a limited resource. Jobs are dependent on things we need to get done.
Once upon the time 100% of jobs were focused on getting food. Hunting and gathering became full time work when population was high. Once farming came around, it freed up some people to do other things. They did not suddenly become lazy do-nothing people. Instead they took up lower priority tasks, and turned them into full time jobs.
Things like clothing manufacturing, which used to be done in your spare time, turned into full industries. New products like shoes, alcohol, luxuries etc. were created.
The question is, are there still things we need to do, but have not been able to afford? The answer to that is YES. We have education, science, space exploration, green technologies, and a host of other things that we has decided would be nice, but we simply don't have the manpower to do.
We will not run out of jobs, instead we will do things that we can not even imagine today. Anymore than a hunter/gatherer could imagine someone would be paid to sell food at a basketball game.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
I guess we could cross train as fast response robotics repairmen, unless it is only a matter of time before that job is mechanized, too. Sigh.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
UK has NHS and more worker rights so they may be ok longer. In the usa some people may have to get a good jail / prison now.
When will people get it through their heads that this is really all about the acceleration of the transfer of wealth from the middle class to the wealthy, and is fundamentally a political matter, not a technical matter?
From TFA "The report calls for a long-term plan to make economic growth inclusive." We had that. It was called the New Deal, and it was dismantled in the 1980's by the Reagan Administration.
Didn't the UNIBOMBER tell us this like 20 years ago, these guys are way behind the curve!
Ha! I'm already training to be a robotics repairmen repairman!
n/t
Robots are better than humans at certain tasks and typically make a product more consistent and reliable. However, I am not sure if world filled with machines doing all the work would be a utopia or a dystopia. On the other hand, maybe by mechanizing we can bring industries back to the US that left for cheap labor. And, of course someone has to fix the machines.
"My predictions have enormously high variance, I can imagine completely plausible, incredibly positive scenarios, but they're only about as probable as actually quite dystopian futures that I can imagine."
The future is uncertain, and we can not predict this aspect with the information we have. So how valid is the 30-50% number then, if it is +-50%?
NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
The Rich and Their Robots Are About to Make Half the World's Jobs Disappear
This sounds approximately as plausible in 2015 as "John Romero's About To Make You His Bitch" did in 1997.
These are the same doom and gloom complaints that have been paraded about for hundreds of years. From the invention of the loom, to the cotton gin, to the transmission from horses to automobiles. Every advance in technology has been followed by those complaining that it will destroy the livelihoods of a majority of the populace. And time and time again they've been proven wrong, virtually every advance has resulted in improved living conditions for all. Now I am sure that there is a point where the costs to society outweigh the benefits but if history has proven anything we are REALLY bad at calculating that point.
Well, Dave Lister did know those soup machines weren't going to repair themselves....
... installs, maintains, and repairs those robots.
...sexually.
Only because the Scutters had a better union....
I wrote an article in exactly this topic https://www.linkedin.com/pulse... - maybe I am an optimist, but I don't see a down side to automation - unless maybe it becomes the exclusive domain of the big corporates or super rich.
No robot will ever take my job because I cultivated the kind of job that can only be done by a human being. In fact, my job can only be done by one particular human being, and that is me. It's known as living off your own intellectual property.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Change to social ownership of means of production and distribution according to social needs (meaning trying to balance the incredible income differences at least in the advanced countries)
or
Continue with private ownership of means of production and distribution according to markets together with huge financial sector (and more income inequality, poverty, joblessness, etc)
There.
Now, start bitching.
Hmmm... I doubt it would be a terribly useful career choice. If there's anything robots would be better than you at is recursion. Anything that can build itself can repair itself at least wholesale even if it can't diagnose.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Pq-S557XQU
I mean can we replace the members of congress with about 600 semi sentient argumentative robots that accomplish nothing. If this is the case, I am all for the robot revolution.
If we could somehow resurrect that talking paper clip from the Microsoft office products, and use him to replace some of these CEO's who have bankrupted their own companies and made tone of money doing it, that would also be a good thing.
-Corporations do not want a free market and competition. They want monopoly and control; even if they have to buy off the government to get it. This is the American way. (wasn't always the case)
I freak the hell out, because I program the robots.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
What good are robots if no one has a job earning money to buy the products made by the robots?
_ _ _ Go for the eyes Boo! GO FOR THE EYES!
This (plausible) scenario has already been covered by CGP Grey.
If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
goddammit i hate vice
I'm just glad my job is to automate machines. Should ensure job security until I can make a machine to replace myself.
Scott
The most probable outcome of the "positive scenario" could be drawn from John Calhoun's Mouse Utopia experiment and it doesn't end well YouTube: Mouse Utopia Experiment
It's all about that. Eventually, the fulcrum is strong enough for a very few creatures to lift the world. And then they start fighting over which is stronger or which is right. So the world falls. More leverage, more risk; less leverage, less risk. Period. The world is now collateral damage to any idiot with a gripe. You're all going to have to learn to behave a bit more civilized to each other, regardless of who started it, or I'm going to have to send you all to your rooms for a long evolutionary time-out.
Love,
Mother Earth, Physics, and Mathematics
P.S. I've worked with you quite a lot, you know... millions of years. Why can't you stop being a bunch of assholes? :cc The Universe
That is all.
Learn to fix robots.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
... and thank the robot personally.
Look at the fast food industry right now. There is no technological reason why the entire thing can't be fully automated. It's just cheaper to use people. Minimum wage means if we could pay them less we would. There is a reason a minimum wage exists. People will work for even less if no one forces those wages.
Goobermints make laws that push for diversity and handicap access. They can easily require X number of meat sacks to Y number of robots in the future.
Lobby congress to raise the min wage, let in everyone from everywhere.
That should ensure that your job is safe.(not) The higher the min wage, the more robots will be built.
ABC - Anywhere But China.
I design, build, and program robots for a living. I'll be long retired before that happens to a scale that I'll have to worry about.
The pound is in the worst shape of any major western currency.
10 years ago the UK realized they had a problem with unfunded pensions for their baby boom and started working on it, with accounting tricks. Their balance sheet now looks better, all pensions are off book.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
...
Look. Look there, at that guy. The young, healthy frycook.
Maybe he's heard that without exclusive skills, he'll end up in terrafoam someday, so he's decided to try and buy a ticket from the diploma printers, and trying to scrape together at least SOME of the gouging education costs (which have long since skyrocketed past "easily afforded with a 20h/wk part-time") rather than become another sucker hooked by the predatory student loan system.
Is there anything for this guy to do? We're already post-labor. We don't pay shit for "labor". There are no ditch diggers. Even those burgers he's flipping, he's only paid because he has the "skills" required for a warm body to deliver a result. The warm body itself is worthless.
Is there anything for this guy to do? He has a few options today, but the moment a robo-cook's cost ticks under his $8/hr or whatever? The existence of that job will evaporate. Globally. "Overnight", if you will.
Is there anything for this guy to do? There's a lot of naive posts saying "There will be jobs" with examples like fucking scientist. We have an ideal, motivated homo sapien right here, eager to work and rearing to go, and no robo-owner will look twice because nothing he does is worth money.
We're in tech, we've got some of the best tickets for The Ark, but we're not going to need ten billion robot repairmen.
Clearly if robots do all the work it means that humans will have more free time to enjoy life. Unless the political class prevents it for some reason in which case we could use the free time to revolt.
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In the US, a corporation has only one mandate- maximize profits for shareholders. There is no rule about being nice to employees or customers or suppliers or environment. There is no rule against manipulating governments in ways that increase profits. There are legions of lawyers across the land who will sue on behalf of shareholders if there is a perceived failure to take a profit opportunity.
This is the reason our society is polarized between the 1% and the rest. There are owners and there are workers. The owners enjoy low taxes and high profits. The workers compete for the scraps and pay for the war machines and government surveillance. The workers appear in the company books as an expense. To maximize profits, that expense must be minimized. CEO bonuses are largely based upon how that expense is minimized.
A new kind of corporation called 'Public Benefit Corporation' is emerging in some states. It allows profit, but these companies have a larger purpose that takes priority. This idea, if supported by the public, could help bring balance to the economy. OTOH if we keep buying from Public Screwing Corporations, abandon all hope.
...omphaloskepsis often...
Here's a scoop, Chinese and other cheap labour can already replace you for a fraction of the cost. Yeah robot could mean less manufacturing job for us, but it's better than losing the whole company if it move oversea.
Elok
Jobs will always be there...for those who are cheaper to use than robots.
You see them in China now, living in barracks, 5 high bunks, working any hours including 24/7 until exhaustion and then docked pay for the sleep hours.
The future is, in essence, wealth for the few, ever increasing poverty for the many
Capitalism triumphant
Until the tumbrils roll
4) We've engineered the world to produce our needs and material wants without much supervision or labor.
a. Now what do we do with our time, and
b. how do we value ourselves and
c. each other?
Personally, I would have no trouble with a. I have an infinite capacity for defining new questions and projects and explorations to fill more than my lifetime.
b. I suspect would not be an issue for most people if it weren't for nasty tendencies in our nature or aculturation around c.
So for my money (or should I say my issued-at-birth crypto currency barter economy exchange tokens), c. is what we need to think hard on and be culturally ingenious about now.
Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
30 years ago a bank was loaded with employees. 20-30 people was not uncommon, and several minutes in line was the norm just to speak to a teller.
Consider that greco-roman slavery allowed people to lay back, relax, and ponder the universe. The only problem was harming innocent people.
So robots are going to replace human labor. So what? They will make us clothes, food, and housing.
Eventually AI will supersede human intelligence. So what? They will make better decisions.
Why so-celled tech geeks keep demanding job creation is bizarre. Ideally, you'd want to eliminate labor entirely.
Amazon's automated warehouses become K-Mart's automated stock rooms. Check-out lines are replaced by assisted self-checkout, allowing one cashier to run 4-6 checkouts. Hamburger makers are replaced by hamburger making machines. Auto manufacturers use a fully machine-tooled line with only a few workers for final assembly. It's coming.
Our welfare system, in 2013, cost $1.62 trillion, of which $1.28 trillion was Federal spending. This is made up of Social Security Old-Age Pensions, Supplemental Disability Insurance, Food stamps, WIC, income security programs, unemployment, and the HUD direct housing voucher program. Just the Federal spending accounts for 37% of Federal spending, 46% of Federal taxes taken, and 55% of all Corporate and Individual income taxes taken at the Federal level.
If we drop the payroll OASDI tax and roll OASDI into general income, all income taxes increase by 9.34%. If we then slice those incomes by 55% and apply a 17.0% separate Dividend Tax on all currently-taxed Income, our tax brackets move from 16.2% on the lowest income earners and 39.6% on the highest income earners to 25.69% and 38.99%. Low-income earners around $9,000 income will take home $5000 more per year; middle-income earners at the $120,000 level will about break even; above that, it increases as high as a 3.17% take-home decrease around $400,000, again breaking even around exactly $2,000,000.
The base income tax system is progressive, and can be adjusted to smooth this out as appropriate; reducing the income taxes at the lowest level to around 0% would return the system to something resembling our current tax structure, with a 3% increase at the highest end. Considering this along with the above, the total taxes taken can raise from 16.2% to 17% on the most poor, and 39.6% to around 43% on the most rich. This compares favorably against current proposals to tax Millionaires and Billionaires at 45%, 50%, 60%, and 80%. Minimizing the taxes in the poor and middle-class ranges is a practical matter: it reduces their wage demand, reducing the cost of labor and slowing down all future transitions to new management strategies designed to reduce labor expenses; such management strategies have higher base cost, but lower labor utilization, and thus are cheaper only when labor is expensive or when the base costs factors of the new strategy have been refined into a significantly inexpensive form.
The 17% Dividend tax would be distributed among every natural-born, resident, American citizen over the age of 18. This specifically excludes the abuses of immigrants flooding to America to live on free Government money, and immigrants crossing the border illegally to birth an American citizen who then goes to live in Cuba or Mexico or wherever with a pension coming at age 18. It also excludes the abuse of welfare families popping out more babies to get at an additional per-child stipend by simply not providing one. The Dividend amounts to $6,558 in 2013; with the typical 3.4% total income growth per year, this amounts to $7,010 in 2015.
In 2013, a 750sqft apartment in a lower-class neighborhood rented for $725/mo, or $0.96 cents per square foot. Assuming an inflated $1.34/sqft, a 224sqft apartment could rent for $300. The model apartment houses a single adult individual and consists of a 6'x9' bedroom suitable to contain a twin bed and a small end-table dresser; a 10'x9' sitting room; a bathroom including a 3'x3' shower stall with corner sink basin and spigot mounted inside, totaling 20 sqft; and an 80sqft kitchen, one counter surface separating it from the sitting room to function as a prep surface and a dining table. These living arrangements provide an improvement over the standard soggy cardboard box inhabited by 600,000 of the United States's poor.
Assuming $300 for rent, out of the 2013 $546/mo, $246 remain. The cost of food is
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When the robots take your job robots and material goods will become cheap too. Return to the land. Produce your own food and many other things. Enjoy life. Fret less. Be.
Something I have sometimes thought about is what happens when all these jobs are replaced?
If a large amount of the population doesn't have work, and a significant other chunk is worried it may soon join it. Then they either don't have money to spend, or are scared to spend what little they have. Once this gets over a certain point then businesses lose a large amount of their paying customers, leading to further job losses, and falling profits and snowballing the situation. Governments also lose out as revenue from taxes decreases sharply (and as such may not be able to support the unemployed). Those who do have the money are also particularly good at not giving it to the government.
What happens then? Do governments collapse and the uber wealthy step in and say 'we are your new overlords'? We effectively go back to monarchy?
Or do we have massive uprisings as this time we don't have uneducated peasants at the bottom but somewhat educated people who can understand what is happening and also use technology to collaborate? Do new companies spring up, willing to offer products at reaonable prices and take business away from the greedy ones? Does traditional currency get set aside and replaced with new ones, causing a reset and effectively destroying the wealth of the wealthy? Or something completely different, taking into account factors I've missed?
Ryans Tutorials - A collection of technology tutorials.
47%, not 46% or 48%. I smell fish. If they'd said 50% (or better, half), I might have believed them.
Require that companies that "eliminate" jobs with automation offer those who have been laid off full funding (with obvious limitations, no $100,000 private education) to cover either an Associates degree, Bachelors degree, or an apprenticeship (basically sponsor them so that they are more appealing to unions and companies that offer an apprenticeship program). That gives people a cushion and opportunity to move to a new job, limiting the impact of transitioning from their old position that was removed.
I thought this type of sensationalist reporting went out of fashion when George W Bush left office.
I personally want *money* not necessarily a job.
Sell hype and deceit! Like these assholes!!!
captcha: exposes
So, robots start replacing jobs because they can make widget X cheaper.
As unemployment increases, less poeple will have the money required to buy widet X. The manufacturers will have to lower prices in order to get sales, and their cost reductions through robots will evaporate. Meanwhile everything just got cheaper.
At some point we'll reach equilibrium again, where the cost benefit of adding a robot will be balanced by the lack of sales due to poeple not having an income. It might be painfull for a while until we get there, but it will happen.
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http://youtu.be/768h3Tz4Qik
that followed the industrial revolution until tech caught up and there was something for people to do again. You're ignoring 2 or 3 lost generations. You're doing this content and safe because you're assuming you'll be dead before the layoffs get to you; and you can't or you're not willing to imagine the same thing happening to your children (or you're a /. meme and you don't have any).
Here's the thing: We CAN imagine it. All of it. You choose not to.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
You just discovered Basic Income. Step forward and get your prize.
That said, I love the idea of rebranding it as a "dividend". You might actually sneak it past the 1% that way. Good luck.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
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We have this same stupid story recycled every week.
-Dave
Enjoy the Pina Coladas on the beach
You guys are dreaming.
Have you ever worked with automation? It's really effective for tasks that can be broken into a consistent series of steps. The more complicated the process, or the more variation between orders, the more people are required to operate the machines. For example, a robot can stuff a circuit board in seconds -- but it takes a whole building full of people to feed those boards into it, load parts, work with customers, keep the machines running.. not to mention experts to program the equipment for each job, or design those products.
The more complicated equipment gets, the more trouble it is. The more a line produces, the more wear and tear occurs. A lot of the machines I design are beat to shit after just a couple months (at least cosmetically) due to extremely hard use, and a new machine tends to need quite a bit of service in its first few months. Their "lives" are only about 5, maybe 10 years before they are either junk, or obsolete. Automation eliminates a lot of grunt work in the long term, but it's extremely labor intensive up front, and the people that remain need to have a lot more training (and brains) than the guys that got let go. Every factory I've ever seen has a crew of guys who repair / install equipment full time, and usually one or more groups visiting from the companies that made that equipment. Less labor is involved, but it's higher-dollar labor.
Software ruins everything. It's tricky to automate a (relatively) simple process, or simplify some task in the office. I have yet to see a version of Windows or a distro of Linux that hasn't had me cursing right out of the gate, and each of those has how many millions of man-hours in it? Computers can't even do what they do now without help.. they are definitely far better than people at a lot of tasks, but they're going to be tools that people use, rather than replacements for people, for a LONG time yet.
Cheap labor in various parts of the world, plus affordable shipping (oil), prevents companies from paying the costs associated with more automation.
Smart people will always be in demand. People with little in the way of skills will always be used and abused... regardless of what "work" looks like in the future.
The obligatory South Park episode referenced here.
"They took our jawbs!"
Tracy Johnson
Old fashioned text games hosted below:
http://empire.openmpe.com/
BT
First, the company that replaces you with automation pays your unemployment until you get another job, not just for 20 weeks. If that means you're still looking when you retire, that's how many years they pay. Certainly, unemployment is *vastly* cheaper than salaries (and all you asshole libertarians that wouldn't touch it, let me tell you that a dozen years ago, I was getting the max in IL... which was about $400/wk.; before getting laid off, I'd been making a *lot* more than that).
Second, how 'bout, since stocks and dividends are *so* great... how 'bout the company, along with their taxes, signs over to the government voting shares, and pays dividends; enough of that, and we can have a reverse income tax.
THAT would solve the problem in a real long-term manner.
Now, what you'd do with all that free time, other than play video games and couch potato, is another story.
mark
i for one welcome........
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
are belong to us.
Don't worry; All unemployed will be shipped to Mars;
Casteism
Just sit back and relax...
Economic laws do change fundamentally, it is hard to predict. However, suppose a robot could do the 10-fold work of what most people could do. Indeed we would not run out of ideas on what to do, but if you could replace yourself, would you continue to add your 10% "output" for 10% extra income, or would you rather have 100% spare time for about 90% income? That is the trade off that will be made in the end.
As robots get more powerful compared to man, and the "pseudo-intelligece" will surpass that of most humans for most tasks, I find it really hard to see how most people would still have meaningful jobs.
It is not about imagining the output, it is about imagining what extra significant contributation most men could make in relation to robots.
Suppose I could invest $50k and get a kind of robotic copy of myself. I could send that to work and do my job for me, enjoy lots of free time and the same income.
On the other hand, suppose my employer would invest these $50k....
In the end, the question is how the "spoils" of automation will be distributed about the population. Indeed that doesn't look good now.
In the future we will have more than enough production capacity to fulfull our needs and wishes, but if we use that capacity to any good, that is compete redistribution of all of it, is questionable. The current trend doesn't look good, but I think economists will see, sooner or later, that the alternative is for the rich to live in a state of siege, military protected and guarded against the masses.
They don't need to worry: The job of publishing stupid, useless and unfounded opinion pieces as studies will never be taken over by robots.
-- 29A the number of the Beast
Butleran jihad
http://www.newser.com/story/19... http://www.dailydot.com/techno... http://www.newser.com/story/18... http://www.newser.com/story/20...
The weather in the Northeast the past five weeks has been absolutely brutal on roofs. It's resulted in dangerous weight conditions resulting in many roof failures and ice dam issues resulting in interior leaks. The biggest problem in my area is finding professionals to get rid of ice and snow on roofs. Guys that will know how to work in dangerous conditions and not damage your property and that understand the issues that lead to roofing problems. Also guys that can deal with chunks of ice weighing hundreds of pounds and realizing that they shouldn't be breaking off ice just over a skylight or other fragile features around a home. It's also nice if they clean off all of the snow and ice around your property that came off your roof. Let me know when there's a robot that can do this.