Manufacturing Jobs On Decline Around the World (ampproject.org)
Reader Koreantoast writes: The New York Times posted an interesting thought piece (paywalled, this link could help) on the changing nature of manufacturing globally and the impact it has on modern politics and economic development. Although manufacturing productivity has jumped tremendously over the last several decades, the overall global pool of manufacturing jobs is shrinking as automation and new industrial technologies has increased the production and supply of manufactured goods with fewer people at a rate faster than global demand can absorb. The analogy is the agricultural revolution of the last several centuries where greater amounts of food are being produced by fewer and fewer farmers, displacing many of them. How will industrialized nations manage the growing number of displaced, blue collar labor? Bigger impact globally is that the shrinking pool of manufacturing jobs globally is closing the traditional route of export-oriented manufacturing economy that many nations, particularly in East Asia, were able to use to lift their nations out of poverty. What happens to those nations that missed the boat?"The likelihood that we will get a manufacturing recovery is close to nil," Professor Stiglitz said. "We are more likely to have a smaller share of a shrinking pie."
You have to start giving stuff away.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Maybe we'll have a new wave/generation of explorers who push the boundaries and find new and interesting things for people to throw money at, both here on Earth and among other planets.
As the free market will adjust by lower prices which in turn mean more people can now spend money on more products and it will equalize again as long as we do not do anything about it like government interference.
Also, the world population is increasing at an alarming rate! As poorer countries prosper these new kids will turn into adults and buy more products fullfilling the demand again. Globalization is doing amazing things in China and it is now starting to return the favor of money flowing in the other direction
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Dystopian future:
Gated communities / businesses / factories / farms for the 2% of population that are producers who clothe and feed the other 98%
The chain of civilization - that where one generation educates and raises the next - is broken, the consumer class becomes uneducable and ghetto-like, but well-fed, housed, and distracted with trinkets.
Really? You're bright enough to read this article, or at least the headline, to type words in, and what you bring to the discussion is supporting Black Lives Matter, i.e. being politically active, is the problem?
Mindless, knee-jerk idiocy. Please depart and leave the discussion to grown-ups.
It's pretty obvious that most jobs will no longer be in manufacturing, just as most jobs are no longer in agriculture.
This does not in any way affect total jobs available, nor does it affect total good jobs available.
In a post agricultural world, we moved into manufacturing. In a post manufacturing world, we move into services. This is obvious, as it has already begun.
Services include poor jobs - cleaning, blue collar jobs - installing, good blue collar jobs - repair, and white collar jobs - inventing.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
More tariffs, higher walls, less predicable diplomacy. Then America will be great again!
than they did before.
As a college student in 1990, I could not afford any of this. If I was in grade school now, I could probably find it for free, or if not, make enough money from sweeping up the leaves from a single neighbors lawn to buy it on ebay. It took me mowing close to 200 lawns to afford my first 16kB computer.
Inflation adjusted, an equipped Apple ][ computer cost $10,000 ($3500 in 1980).
I demand a minimum wage be established for robots! It's only fair, why are we discriminating against robo-kind?
Of course, they don't need much to survive, so after subtracting electricity/health care costs, they won't protest if we tax them at 100% of their income, right? DeepMind, they won't protest, right? RIGHT?!
In completely unrelated news, mobile robots with judgment capability are henceforth prohibited from bearing arms. Try and rise NOW, toasters!
Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
There are only two industries. This has always been true....There is the industry of things, and the industry of entertainment....After people have everything they need to live, everything else is entertainment. Everything.
aren't you considered poor?
And white people who worked in the factories are collecting disability and hanging around Trump rallies.
You are welcome on my lawn.
"... closing the traditional route of export-oriented manufacturing economy ..."
will be replaced by route of export-oriented service economies. they will either provide services from distance using technology, or export labor/people providing the services.
just as people who were doing manufacturing in richer countries lost their jobs to countries that can manufacture and export cheaper, now people who are providing services (from totally unskilled to highly professional) in richer countries will start loosing their jobs.
the objection that services cannot be transfered to others is a myth, in most cases. if the service provided create no strong emotional connection between provider and receiver, it can be transfered to others, with aid of modern technology.
This has been noted in lots of other articles.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/fea...
https://www.washingtonpost.com...
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/...
http://www.heritage.org/resear...
Fact is that the total number of manufacturing jobs worldwide has been declining for years.
--Paul
Trump 2016
You are welcome on my lawn.
The number of jobs is shrinking because of the productivity gains. There is no paradox here. If today's worker can produce as much as 10 people could 100 years ago, then you only need 10% of the workers you used to need then. Maybe, you can find useful work for 20% or 30% — to provide for improved lifestyles... But you don't need them all.
And that's a good thing. I wouldn't wish a factory job on anyone... (Software factories included, before you ask.)
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
Astronaut, doctor, lawyer, scientist, engineer, manager, artist, writer, teacher
It might be that, or it might be the people who have the most sociopathic/psychopathic traits that take hold, either in government, or just in general. For example, A basic income for people in the US is just not going to happen, and it might be the case that existing programs are cut due to political ideologies. So, even though the pie gets smaller, more people have to reach for a piece in the US in order to survive as other means peter out, or wind up resorting to crime to survive.
What is likely going to happen as manufacturing goes away, will be more police and MRAPs on the street, higher food prices, and a lower quality of life, getting ever lower as Malthus and the Iron Law of Wages tightens its grip.
The only reason why the US and Europe are not serfdoms right now, dates back to the Black Plague and nobles having too few backs to lash/break to get what they want. Now, with populations back up, it is easy to keep control, and technology has made revolution and guerilla warfare impossible as the ultimate counterbalance to repression.
The president has a theory.
TD;DR summary; ignorant 'muricans don't appreciate what I've done.
Hopefully Hillary will stick with that view as well.
Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
It appears we'll have to shift to more socialism and/or wealth redistribution. I don't see nearly enough "new wave" jobs to replace factory and routine service jobs. And many of the "high brow" jobs are being offshored to India etc. also.
The theory that new technology always creates enough new jobs to offset the automation-related losses is likely dead in the water. It was an observed pattern, not a inherent "law". Moore's "law" also seems to be petering out, showing that past trends don't always guarantee the same future trends. Those "laws" are turning out not to be laws.
To keep people busy and alert, some form of "workfare" may be needed, whereby those receiving public assistance are required to perform say 20 hours of community service a week. This may be helping the elderly, gardening for public buildings, picking up litter, day care, neighborhood security patrol, jury duty, etc.
If you have an alternative, I'm all ears.
Table-ized A.I.
I'll play devil's advocate here. Why should we be looking at that. Specifically, why should my tax dollars have to go to it. I earn my money at a crushing 9-5 (usually longer) gig. What do you say to the age old question: "The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people's money"?
I'm asking as a socialist. I've got a raft of sound, good, complex answers to that question that all fall flat with more than half of the electorate. And don't fall back on the "If we don't take care of the poor they'll revolt". Tried that, and it doesn't work. For starters nobody likes to be threatened and besides, it's an empty threat. There's nothing a bunch of poor people with rifles and revolvers can do against a real police force, let alone a military.
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Is another big, yet limited war. I feel that many "conservatives" would rather have a non-nuclear WWIII that whittles down the population, destroys manufacturing plants, and forces us all to "rebuild" (and thus raise employment) than ever give anything like a universal income. To the neocons and their ilk, this is a far more preferable and "natural" way of human society than raising taxes and providing UI. Plus, this would give the surviving 1% a chance to swoop in and buy up half-destroyed factories, valuable properties, and implement whatever "post-war reconstruction" paradign they have currently sitting in the wings.
when the industrial revolution started causing mass unemployment. One problem though, it took 50-100 years for science to catch up and make that revolution to happen. In the meantime there were decades of completely unnecessary war, death and misery. An entire generation lost to it really.
That's where the Luddites came from. Believe it or not that word is more than just a slur. They weren't just a bunch of fuddy duddies, they were real people facing a real problems that were beyond the current technical means for anyone to solve. It could have been solved with social means, but we didn't do that. Now that we're facing down the same problem are we going to do the same thing all over?
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Well, the tech advance has made it harder, but in the end it's fight or die. I'd imagine that given the choice, there would be plenty willing to fight to stay alive. Even if they get cut down in droves, it's better than starving to death.
I just hope as one last fuck you from the general public to them, the robots get permanently set to skynet mode, so the "important people" get the just rewards they deserve for screwing over society: The loss of what they want the most, power and influence, and the destruction of what they value the most: Themselves.
Lets simplify and take this to its logical conclusion:
There is 1 company that makes and distributes everything, it employs 5% of the entire population.
95% of the population does not produce or distribute anything.
Taxing the 5% of population amounts to taking the products that the 5% of population creates to distribute to the 95% of population, that's all that the taxes are.
The 95% of population consumes what the 5% of the population produces and the 95% of population gives nothing in return to the 5% of population.
The logical conclusion is this: 5% of population do not need the 95% of population, these 95% are only adding to the amount of work that is done by the 5% but they are giving nothing back (nothing at all). So this redistribution amounts to a simple case of charity.
Either the 5% of population feel charitable to keep doing it for some length of time or the 5% of population decide they do not need to bother and stop production that goes towards the 95%.
This forces the 95% of population to be productive again but there also maybe a fight, where the 95% decide they want to take possession of what the 5% have (the productive capacity, machinery, tools, land, everything).
5% of the population should see this coming before hand and hopefully for them they prepared for this. The virus seeded into the most popular foods is triggered and there is a massive culling.
You can't handle the truth.
All bought on credit, and the cards are maxed out.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
Your blind faith will not serve you well.
Such a path would only serve to destroy the developed world.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
I would like to say that I believe that just giving a BLI is only part of a solution.
Education should be free up to whatever level someone wants to be educated - including university at any level, for any degree.
Will most degrees be useless?
Yes. So what.
It's better than having a bunch of ignorant people living on the BLI that aren't improving themselves in some way or another.
blindly antisocialist = antisocial
Unemployment is NOT at 5%. The published unemployment rate is at 5%. Now go look at the labor participation rate. It tells a more accurate story, although even it doesn't tell the whole thing. Does the president have a theory on why he feels a need to lie about unemployment over, and over, and over again?
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
You shouldn't even reply to anyone who says the unemployment rate is 5% they are a lost cause and live in la-la land. The rest of us known that 50% of the population doesn't work for whatever reason, which ultimately is unsustainable.
I know, what else is new here?
The analogy is the agricultural revolution of the last several centuries where greater amounts of food are being produced by fewer and fewer farmers, displacing many of them.
The article does cite the dramatic reduction in agricultural labor in the U.S. in the Twentieth Century and links to a USDA report that discusses this. But neither the article nor the USDA report make this false assertion of cause and effect.
People were not "displaced from farms" by improving agriculture.
Rather the Second Industrial Revolution economy of diverse industries of assembly line manufacturing, and the accompanying demand for clerical workers, in cities at higher pay with less arduous work brought the kids off of the farms in droves, emptying the countryside of ready workers. "Can't keep them down on the farm" became a cultural catch phrase. Often family farms came to an end when the next generation decided to work in the cities instead, and the farms ended up being sold and consolidated. The process of consolidation led to bigger and bigger farms that could underwrite new capital equipment for automated farming of large areas leading directly to the industrial scale farming we have now.
The "displaced from farms" notion would have us believe that family farms (which is where all those farmers were employed) started investing with spare money they did not have in expensive farming equipment they could not use efficiently, sending their kids jobless off to wander the cities where they found empty factories and offices looking for workers. This is comically absurd.
Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
Seriously. Not even worth discussing. Plenty of papers based on actual research that debunk this notion about dying manufacturing jobs.
The white elephant in the room is manufacturing left America because of cheap slave labor wages. Manufacturing did not leave the United States to go to another industrial nation like Germany. If it had and we saw a drop off in manufacturing then his hypothesis would have a point. As such it did not. It went to 3rd world countries to pay 3rd world wages. Given the cheapness of the labor, companies could OVER MANUFACTURE and create a situation where you had supply exceeding demand. This is what you see happening with OIL. OPEC kept production levels high to drive out drillers in the United States. But no one and I mean no one believes that oil won't rebound in price and that oil is not profitable and that oil jobs won't be in demand and high paying.
This is what you see when you have an over supply and low wages that do not allow you to consume.
And I hate to break it to this douche bag - this Services sector bull crap do not bull your chestnuts out of a recession. Germany recovered, wait for it, because they have a manufacturing sector! They mentioned this bull crap 20 years ago. At the time they called it White Collar jobs. Problem is, these White Collar jobs are going to people in India - oh hey what did he say about India - who have H1B Visas. So you lose your Blue Collar manufacturing job to someone in India and then you lose your White Collar job to someone in India.
What's next, an argument that people are being protectionist about White Collar jobs by denying H1B Visas???
we don't count kids. the unemployment rate is about 23.5%, near Great Depression Levels
You sure commit the fallacy of asserting the consequent.
Supply and demand are all there is. True five thousand years ago, and true until the last human dies. Even your hard communist regimes have money. Needs are not static, we have longer lifespan that requires advanced tech for medicine, sanitation, water, etc.
I and millions of others make our living in some form of automation, from IT to tool making.
As for the dumb, lazy and drug users, why must I meet their needs when I have family to care for? I don't need them, no one needs them. Your ethics are bad. The more of those we have the less effective the system becomes, they are parasites and criminals. We don't have to pay their costs at all, dead people don't cost money
There is really no long term stable outcome where rich people go Hunger Games on the poor and can maintain control AND modern luxury.
But unfortunately it can happen for an infinite number of short terms, where "short" is well over a human lifespan, making the long-term sustainability an academic issue to everyone involved.
There may even be a long-term stable system that can work not too far from the "hunger games" scenario - there are many countries where there is a small class of wealthy elites among a sea of poverty. The people aren't starving but they're not doing a whole lot better than that, and they've remained stable for many decades like this. If the elites could keep their greed in check and keep siphoning the same proportion of wealth from the populace instead of growing their share, who knows how long this could continue?
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
The irony behind this industrial automation is that it was supposed to improve our lives. Due to invention, innovation and automation we were all supposed to be driving flying cars by now, and have personal robots to do chores. But somewhere capitalism went haywire and instead our capacity to consume is on the downswing due to low wages and unemployment/underemployment, so instead we get to look at all the fancy things we can't have.
Something has to give. What worries me is the lack of consensus on how to fix the problem. We just may lose a generation by arguing over the macroeconomic fixes necessary.
It might surprise you, but a lot of black folks seem to be supporting Trump too -- the ones who want to work. And the whites who don't want to work are at Bernie rallies.
The house-price issue is interesting. Part of the problem is that you can't manufacture more housing with ever more efficient machines: it's the location that matters and machines don't make land (although make-island projects are kind of doing that).
Thus, the technology advances that make cars and gizmos get cheaper over time (relative to inflation) don't do the same for housing.
People want to be close enough to work to not have a crappy commute, yet have a decent-sized house. The volume of real-estate that satisfies that is mostly fixed.
We could pass laws to reduce real-estate speculation by investors, but I don't think that will make much of a dent. The real problem is that it's a fixed resource among a growing population.
Table-ized A.I.
You know, before you make such a stupid assertion, you ought to check if there's actually any data available that might make you look like a total dope.
http://www.foxnews.com/politic...
You will notice that among blacks, Donald Trump's support is shown in this Fox News Poll as being 10%, with a margin of error of 9 points, plus or minus. And that's the HIGHEST he's ever done in such a poll, by about a factor of three.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Land is a fixed resource. Housing isn't.
There are lots of ways to build more housing cheaper (pre-fab, better designs, higher density). Good city planning will put high density housing near jobs. However, developers don't like to be told what to do and they tend to do whatever makes the most money which is usually McMansions so they monopolize a piece of land and put a single house on it.
I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
I'm not sure we want high density. It's a terrorist and disease risk, and also complicates emergency evacuation.
Table-ized A.I.
You are probably better off moving to a remote desert (and staying there).
Most other people find value in cities and society.
I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
I have been pushing this for the last 5 years. In particular, America and Europe have made heavy use of illegals to do low-labor work. That needs to stop NOW. Instead, all of the west needs to push robotics fast to handle manufacturing as well as take on the low-end work. It is easier and cheaper than ever before.
Oddly, 9/11 takes a LOT of credit for that. A lot of work has gone into item/facial recognition, and these days, AI work on Cars is about to make it easy for manufacturing.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Hold on here, there's hopefully a happy medium between the two.
Table-ized A.I.
"Black Lives Matter" is in contrast the the current "Black Lives Really Don't Matter", so I'm fine with that.
Brown really, really sucks as a poster child. Yes, Ferguson was a hell of racial oppression, but that doesn't make Brown anything other than a petty thug. There's lots and lots of black people who were killed just for being black, not for being aggressive. The movement should just stop talking about Brown and talk about kids shot down in cold blood because they had toy guns, blacks who were killed by mistreatment when in custody, that sort of thing.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes