Slashdot Mirror


'Robots Won't Just Take Our Jobs -- They'll Make the Rich Even Richer' (theguardian.com)

Robotics and artificial intelligence will continue to improve -- but without political change such as a tax, the outcome will range from bad to apocalyptic, writes technology and politics journalist Ben Tarnoff, citing experts and studies, for The Guardian. From the article, shared by six anonymous readers: Despite a steady stream of alarming headlines about clever computers gobbling up our jobs, the economic data suggests that automation isn't happening on a large scale. The bad news is that if it does, it will produce a level of inequality that will make present-day America look like an egalitarian utopia by comparison. The real threat posed by robots isn't that they will become evil and kill us all, which is what keeps Elon Musk up at night -- it's that they will amplify economic disparities to such an extreme that life will become, quite literally, unlivable for the vast majority. A robot tax may or may not be a useful policy tool for averting this scenario. But it's a good starting point for an important conversation. Mass automation presents a serious political problem -- one that demands a serious political solution. Automation isn't new. In the late 16th century, an English inventor developed a knitting machine known as the stocking frame. By hand, workers averaged 100 stitches per minute; with the stocking frame, they averaged 1,000. This is the basic pattern, repeated through centuries: as technology improves, it reduces the amount of labor required to produce a certain number of goods. So far, however, this phenomenon hasn't produced extreme unemployment. That's because automation can create jobs as well as destroy them. What's different this time is the possibility that technology will become so sophisticated that there won't be anything left for humans to do. What if your ATM could not only give you a hundred bucks, but sell you an adjustable-rate mortgage?

41 of 644 comments (clear)

  1. Bull by nospam007 · · Score: 5, Informative

    "By hand, workers averaged 100 stitches per minute; with the stocking frame, they averaged 1,000. This is the basic pattern, repeated through centuries: as technology improves, it reduces the amount of labor required to produce a certain number of goods. So far, however, this phenomenon hasn't produced extreme unemployment."

    Yes, it did. Automatic steam-powered weaving machines caused the birth of the Union movement, because hundreds of thousands lost their jobs worldwide.
    Just nobody cared at the time and the rich did get richer then as well.

    1. Re:Bull by Solandri · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One problem with your theory. The rich can't get richer if the masses can't afford to buy the shiny new toys being made by the robots.

      Technological advancements can't result in long-term widescale job loss. Because if it does, the masses wouldn't be able to buy as much stuff, and it would reduce the country's net productivity, meaning a smaller pie for the rich to take their disproportionate slice from. Free market economics views reduced productivity as an inefficiency, and tries to get rid of it (actually it simply offers greater rewards for higher-productivity activity, which has the side-effect of strangling low-productivity activity). Either the robot-produced products need to be lowered in price to just as or more affordable to the masses than before they were produced by robots (meaning poor people's standard of living stays the same or increases - i.e. they become richer), or the wages of the masses have to increase so they can afford to buy as many or more toys as before (meaning poor people become richer).

      That's why historically in developed nations, the rich have gotten richer, and the poor have also gotten richer. That the rich have gotten richer than the poor have gotten richer is certainly a valid complaint. And you can also complain that the changes are happening too quickly for the masses to retrain for new jobs. But casting it as a doom and gloom scenario where 1% control all the wealth and the rest of the population is jobless and lives on a starvation diet is simply unrealistic. Long before that happens, a free poor people would create a black market doing jobs for and trading with each other using an alternate currency, essentially invalidating the non-material wealth of the 1%. So any way to keep the masses employed, productive, and being paid results in a better outcome for both poor people and rich people. There is no us vs them here.

      The only thing that can ruin an entire economy is a government on a misguided quest for economic equality - because only a government can deprive people of freedom to make their own economic decisions. That freedom is what allows people to increase their standard of living - by individually choosing more productive activities over less.

    2. Re:Bull by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 3, Informative

      Millions of people starved to death in India and all over British colonies when Britain dumped their factory made goods. In fact without such a large dumping ground creating jobs in Britain, the Industrial Revolution might have fizzled out. Hungry mobs would have rebelled and destroyed everything.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    3. Re:Bull by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Technological advancements can't result in long-term widescale job loss. Because if it does, the masses wouldn't be able to buy as much stuff, and it would reduce the country's net productivity, meaning a smaller pie for the rich to take their disproportionate slice from.

      That seems like an argument for why it would be bad for technological advancements to result in job loss -- which is a very different thing than an argument for why they can't result in job loss.

      If you think the individually-rational decisions of various companies will always guarantee a universally-positive outcome for the market as a whole, then you've never experienced a market crash or a tragedy-of-the-commons. The "invisible hand" is not an infallible guide.

      because only a government can deprive people of freedom to make their own economic decisions

      Another canard -- there's nothing particularly unique about governments in that respect. Any sufficiently powerful entity can deprive people of freedom to make their own economic choices, and private corporations also do it all the time. Read about the "company store" for miners, or the conditions in which migrant agricultural workers were (and are) held. It's no good to say "well, they're technically free to walk away whenever they want" if, as a practical matter, they do not have the economic resources to do so.

      That freedom is what allows people to increase their standard of living - by individually choosing more productive activities over less.

      And what do you do when there is no activity that you are capable of that is economically productive, because anything you could do, a machine can do better and more cheaply? Hope that other people will buy your (inferior and more expensive) products/services out of sympathy for your plight?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    4. Re:Bull by Squiffy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do correct me if I have a glaring misconception, but it seems to me that if robots are doing enough of the work, the rich can use their power to obviate the poor. Of what use are the poor if there's no demand for their work, and you have nothing to gain by trading with them because automation can create whatever is most valuable to you? What is the point of personal economic liberty if most people have no wealth to make decisions about?

    5. Re:Bull by MorePower · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At some point though, the rich won't need money from the masses. They will be able to just directly order their robo-factories to directly build their yachts and mega-mansions, using robo-manufactured components built from robo-harvested raw materials. If they don't personally own robo-companies that have what they need, they can just trade with other 1%ers who do own the right robo-resources.

      They probably will need a few lesser humans (at least in the beginning) to fill in the gaps that robots can't (yet) do. But that will just be an issue of enticing the best of the best non-1%ers with the opportunity to live in the servants' wing of their robo-built mansion and eat the leftovers of their robo-harvested food.

      Right now they only need money from the masses so they can use that money to employee the masses. That dependancy goes away of you already own vast armies of robots that serve you for free.

    6. Re:Bull by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How do goods get made?

      Answer: Goods are made by the application of labor. If you have a method by which you slowly assemble a chair, you can make 1 chair per hour; thus, for us to buy those chairs, we must pay you a fraction of your labor time--if you work 40 hours per week, we must pay you 1/40th--in terms of a wage equal to that fraction of your living expense. Carry this out, and the money you must receive has to pay the wages involved in producing those things that you buy. That is the minimum.

      If you find a way to do it in half the time, you make 2 chairs per hour, and you live at the standard of living produced by 80 times the price at which you sell a chair.

      he assumed that if X amount of labor went into an object, then it's worth X (whatever X is in inflation adjusted dollars).

      The chair isn't worth X; if you make 100 chairs for 10 hours of labor and someone immediately figures out how to do 100 chairs in 1 hour of labor, everyone buys his chairs and yours rot. That means...

      if no one wants to buy that widget, then it's not worth three hours of labor.

      It's not going to sell for three hours's worth of labor; it's going to sell for what people are willing to buy.

      many objects are worth much more than the labor required to produce them.

      No, many objects sell for much more than the labor required to produce them. Primarily, things which are quite expensive or for which most people do not have a need or desire have a very small demand market. This low demand means entering the supplier market is risky, and tends to lead to failure. As such, there is little competition; and the people buying your stuff tend to be quite well-funded, so hiking prices is actually viable.

      Many luxury objects have entered the realm of cheap mass-production as technology marches on. When they do, the net margins of businesses producing them--that is, the labor required to produce plus the labor required to organize as the cost underlies the price--tend to shrink. Suppliers can enter the market readily due to the ability to produce cheaper than the next guy and a vast basis of consumers.

      Goods do not have value. People have an imaginary valuation of a good: they envision, in their minds and as a property of their own beliefs, that a value is attributable to a good. The good does not have any such worth; it has a cost and a price.

      That cost is labor--or the wage-labor as the price of labor times the amount of labor. Wage inequality essentially means my 1 hour of $20/hr work can induce another man to work 2 hours at $10/hr; and taxes, profits, and even savings generally tend to pay wages eventually, by infrastructure and government services, expansion and risk controls (business profits cover later losses), or delayed spending. Some money does vanish off into giant stockpiles, and is replaced by more debt issued into the economy.

      The only thing that has to balance out, absolutely, is the labor exchange: all exchanged goods and services must equate, eventually, to all labor which has been invested in the exchange of those goods and services--including idle labor which was drawing a paycheck and accounted for in the price of goods and services exchanged. That's a physical law. You can't spend 100 hours making cars at a rate of 1 car per 50 hours and end up with 3 cars.

      Yes, that means some of your money goes into idle workers, into goods produced and unsold and taken as a loss, and into all kinds of other horse shit that doesn't materialize as an addition of wealth. It happens.

    7. Re:Bull by MobyDisk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I see a flaw:

      What happens when you pay your workers the same wage and have them work the same hours, but you only employ 50% as many workers? ...Mind you, because that stove is only $1,673, the households which historically bought the $1,800 models can now buy your previously-$3,200 model in the same budget (although the $1,800 models will also be cheaper). Most likely, you'll move more product

      But now, only 50% of the people have jobs. So there are fewer households that can afford the $1,800 models.

      Consider this scenario, then let me tie it into your scenario:

      There are 4 farmers. The farmers share their grazing land, but each one keeps the profits from shearing their own sheep. Each farmer starts with 10 sheep. Each farmer asks "should I buy another sheep?" Well, since they keep the profits from the sheep they buy, but share the costs, each farmer decides it is economical to buy another sheep. But now, each farmer found their cost increased by 1 full sheep, not 1/4 of a sheep, but it increased by 1/4 of a sheep for the sheep they bought and 3/4 for the 3 sheep the other farmers bought. Lesson: "Local optimization does not lead to global optimization."

      Now in your scenario, the product price dropped because one company cut its labor by 50%. That resulted in fewer households who can afford $1,800. But this is just one employer out of millions. So the resulting reduction from the layoffs does not significantly reduce the number of total households that can afford the $1,800 models. However, what if all the other factories do the same thing? This problem starts to look a lot like the sheep scenario. Each factory saves money by reducing their own labor pool, but they share the customers pool. But if all factories do this same labor and cost reduction, it starts to impact the pool of customers. The short-term winner is the company that can cut costs faster than other companies. But eventually, everyone loses.

    8. Re:Bull by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Maybe this is the endgame of human evolution. Instead of having 7 billion people, of whom 1% are rich (that's 70 million): perhaps you have a human population of 70 million rich people, and about 7 billion robots? Not so scary if you are one of the 1%. I just don't want to be around during the transition period.

  2. So. . . Robots. . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    . . . . they'll take err jerbs ???

    (sorry, couldn't resist. . .)

  3. Re:so what? by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or we could just up corporate taxes and accept that full-time long-term employment in many sectors is a thing of the past.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  4. ATM could sell you an adjustable rate mortgage by Notabadguy · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, then I'd tell the ATM to go fuck itself, since adjustable rate mortgages are a scam, then I'd go find a different ATM that would sell me a fixed rate mortgage.

    The first ATM would of course end up needing a machine-government bailout because it's too big to fail.

  5. the proliferation of horses by iggymanz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    will mean our city will be ten foot deep in manure in less than a quarter century!

    Alarmists need to stop thinking any one thing can be extrapolated to the future without society and technology changing and adapting. And no, tax as an attempt to slow or stall inevitable progress is not a solution at all.

  6. Re:so what? by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's the problem: That doesn't work this time around.

    Back when agriculture was modernized so that we didn't need 70+ percent of the workforce in the production of food anymore, the people that worked on the fields before moved to the towns and worked in factories, and farmhands became factory workers. When factories started to modernize and automatize, people went into services and factory workers became waiters and salespeople.

    The problem is that now we're replacing these people and there isn't anything they could move towards. There is no new sector opening that would hoover up that free workforce this time.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  7. Err, guys? by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the vast majority of humanity becomes unemployed (which is what this apocalyptic scenario implies), then no one will be buying the products that these robots make. Without customers and the money/purchasing they bring, businesses tend to collapse fairly quickly. You could counter with "well, the rich will just buy stuff from each other", but 1) the scale won't be there to justify the automation in most cases, and 2) in economics, just like in biology, when the genetic pool gets too small for a species, the result eventually becomes extinction.

    Look, I get it, but honestly, this is the same argument that was being advanced 100 years ago when electricity was automating things (and 'OMG that Westinghouse guy is going to have more money than a god while the rest of us starve!'), 200 years ago when steam was automating things, etc etc. People have always adapted, shifted their career focus, and created new industries which are not as easily automated. Unless someone can come up with an argument showing how this time will be different (hint: it probably won't), then this is just a rehash of an old argument.

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    1. Re:Err, guys? by H3lldr0p · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not only that but it gives our society a chance to ask some good questions. Such as, "Does work really matter?" and "Why must a person earn a living?". When for all practical purposes our base necessities are taken care of automatically, why should anyone labor?

      I think that question is something a lot of the very wealthy, and mostly those who are newly wealthy, are afraid of asking. If not more than a little jealous of.

    2. Re:Err, guys? by sinij · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You forget wars in-between. Wars, collapse of empires and so on has equalizing and wealth distributing effect. Modern imperial wars will inevitably involve nukes, there won't be anything left to distribute afterwards.

  8. Re:ATM by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So asked the farmhand back two hundred years, who will drive those machines that mow your fields and harvest your potatoes? You cannot get rid of me!

    True. we still need one person to drive that machine.

    Instead of thousands harvesting by hand.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  9. Re:so what? by mpercy · · Score: 4, Informative

    The CBO produced a report "THE INCIDENCE OF THE CORPORATE INCOME TAX" in which it states "A corporation may write its check to the Internal Revenue Service for payment of the corporate income tax, but that money must come from somewhere: from reduced returns to investors in the company, lower wages to its workers, or higher prices that consumers pay for the products the company produces."

    And it goes on to say

    "Although economists are far from a consensus about exactly who bears how much of the burden of the corporate income tax, the existing studies highlight the significant types of economic mechanisms as well as the empirical estimates necessary for further quantifying the burdens. CBO's review of the studies yields the following conclusions:

    o The short-term burden of the corporate tax probably falls on stockholders or investors in general, but may fall on some more than on others, because not all investments are taxed at the same rate.

    o The long-term burden of corporate or dividend taxation is unlikely to rest fully on corporate equity, because it will remain there only if marginal investment is not affected by those taxes. Most economists believe that the corporate tax system has some effect on investment decisions.

    o Most evidence from closed-economy, general-equilibrium models suggests that given reasonable parameters, the long-term incidence of the corporate tax falls on capital in general.

    o In the context of international capital mobility, the burden of the corporate tax may be shifted onto immobile factors (such as labor or land), but only to the degree that the capital and outputs of different countries can be substituted.

    o In the very long term, the burden is likely to be shifted in part to labor, if the corporate tax dampens capital accumulation.

  10. Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Automatic steam-powered weaving machines caused the birth of the Union movement

    The rich are spending billions to kill off unions by a combination of (legally) bribing politicians, and propping up plutocrat-kissing pundits like Fox News, Rush, and Breitbart to convince the voting population that unions kill jobs and the economy.

    The rich are winning the class war because they can buy more and bigger weapons.

    1. Re:Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by Penguinisto · · Score: 3, Informative

      1) Government workers and government worker unions are apples/oranges compared to private-sector unions. They operate under vastly different environments, parameters, and conditions.

      2) You're misrepresenting the argument: the actual reason for busting the public school employee unions (and not the NEA or AFT, which are national teacher unions) was to remove forced-membership requirements and the massive fraud/waste/abuse (and not a little political abuse) that had sprung from its membership and leadership.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    2. Re:Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then what they will be buying themselves, eventually, is civil war. People will not just sit quietly and starve to death or die of exposure when they get evicted because they have no income. They'll turn to crime to feed themselves and their families, and when things get bad enough, someone will rally them together and there will be armed conflict, insurrection against those that are oppressing them and leaving them to die; this is another pattern that repeats itself throughout human history as well: you shit on people's heads enough, they reach a point where all hell breaks loose. I for one believe that at least here in the U.S., and with any luck at all, other 1st-World countries, the government will see what's happening well in advance of things going too far, and will take steps to ensure that the average citizen is not left to fend for themselves. Additionally, while I firmly believe that there are corporations and people out there who really don't give a damn about people in general, so long as they get richer, I also firmly believe that there are companies, corporations, organizations, and people with lots of money who are pro-human, and will voluntarily ensure that workers are people in general are not left out in the cold. There is much evil in the world, but it's not a world entirely ruled by evil, either, there is enough good out there to keep things balanced.

    3. Re:Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Local unions might be a good idea, but the AFL/CIO style national unions are themselves big corrupt corporations, so in practice being unionized just means you have two sets of rich people screwing you over.

    4. Re:Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Black Mirror, Season One, Episode 2 (I think) - virtual value is bull----. What's the point of working if all you get is a new hat for your avatar that doesn't even exist in the real world? Just because stuff has a price doesn't mean it's good, or has value. So much "value" created today is just a way to waste people's spare time, which they apparently have far too much of. And it doesn't have to be "virtual" product like avatars, or movies, music, or books. Walk through Target / WalMart / KMart / JCPenney / Sears / Dillards / Bonwitt Teller / Neimann Marcus / Whatever and behold the array of stuff, so very very much stuff of so very very little life enhancing value. A 60" TV does not enhance your life 2x as much as a 19" screen - better? sure, more valuable? a little, life changing? not really much at all. That array of stores all carries clothing, some at quite dramatically varying price points - is the $200 shirt really 20x better than the $10 one? Oh, yes, anyone can tell the $200 shirt looks better, but 20x better? Even 5x better on sale? Hardly.

    5. Re:Rich are winning class war [Re: Bull] by crtreece · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Then what they will be buying themselves, eventually, is civil war.

      The owner-class won't worry about that. They'll be directing their hunter/killer robots from within their walled off enclaves.

      Seriously. Once the dirty business of producing food, clothing, shelter, and high-tech toys is fully automated, why would the .1% want the unwashed masses around, other than for entertainment?

      --
      file: .signature not found
  11. Re:Duh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Only in this scenario you are the ox...

  12. Can't name replacements [Re:Err, guys?] by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People have always adapted, shifted their career focus, and created new industries which are not as easily automated. Unless someone can come up with an argument showing how this time will be different

    Here's the evidence: nobody can identify the new fields that are replacing the old ones, unlike the past. Sure, there are new fields, but they not appearing in sufficient quantity to replace those lost. And even those fields are being offshored to cheap-labor countries.

    For example, craigslist employs about 60 people, but has probably killed tens or hundreds of thousands of newspaper-related jobs in the process.

  13. Re:Robot tax is infeasible by freeze128 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Replace "Homer" with "George Jetson", and then get off my lawn.

  14. ObManna by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Already covered in Marshall Brain's book "Manna".

    The real problem is not the robots. It's the humans.

    If you use robots to further your greed, then yes, the rich get richer. If you use robots to help out humanity, surprise! They help out humanity. (It should be noted that Manna actually has a form of Universal Basic Income which is used to manage resources).

  15. Re:so what? by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I see plenty of trash to pick up on the roadsides, landscaping that could be better tended, public spaces that could use more frequent cleaning and maintenance, infrastructure that could be better maintained, planets that need exploring and colonization... I don't think we actually lack for things to do, just the will to do them.

  16. Re:so what? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Didn't you hear? Corporate taxes are eeeeeevil.

    Actually, in many ways, they are. Corporate taxes are often seen as a way to make fat cats pay. But the opposite is true: corporate taxes tend to be regressive. If you tax a corporation, the money comes from some combination of shareholders, customers, and employees. The biggest shareholders are pension funds, holding the savings of middle class works. Big companies tend to make goods, while small companies provide services. So if you tax big companies, the tax burden is shifted to goods (disproportionately purchased by the poor) rather than services (disproportionately purchased by the rich). Corporate taxes also have pernicious side effects, such as pushing investment and jobs overseas.

    If you want to target the rich, it is much better to make individual income taxes more progressive, rather than trying to do it indirectly by taxing corporations.

  17. AI and automation superior to human labour by presidenteloco · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What you're missing is that AI and automation is advancing to be GENERALLY more effective and more cost-effective than people's labour, GENERALLY, as in, across very wide swaths of potential tasks. That implies a profoundly changed game, and as far as automation vs humans, it will be zero-sum, because for just about any job category, the automation/AI will be the more effective and cost-effective hence market-selected option.

    A lot of people don't seem to get that this crossing point (automation > human capability) is coming soon (and in many sectors has already come).

    Individually, and in society and political culture, we have to GROK this, then go through the usual stages of grief:
    Denial – The first reaction is denial. In this stage individuals believe the diagnosis is somehow mistaken, and cling to a false, preferable reality.
    Anger – When the individual recognizes that denial cannot continue, they become frustrated, especially at proximate individuals.
    Bargaining – The third stage involves the hope that the individual can avoid a cause of grief.
    Depression – "I'm so sad, why bother with anything?";
    Acceptance

    And then, after not too long a grieving pause, we need to come up with real solutions (as contrasted with keeping the Mexicans, Chinese, and Indians out, which are misguided FAKE solutions.)
    At the core of a real solution will be us reconceptualizing what people are here for and where we should get our self-worth.
    At the core of a real solution needs to be fair and adequate ways of distributing the proceeds of a substantially automated economy.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  18. Re:so what? by LifesABeach · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is a new Sector emerging, the Unemployed and Underemployed. What could possibly go wrong?

  19. and... rich is bad? by mad7777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't see "the rich" becoming richer as a problem. If poor people are becoming poorer, in absolute terms, then we have a problem. I don't see that happening, however, since increased robotic productivity should normally (free of government interference) result in more abundant goods and services, raising the living standard for everyone. Sure, the rich will reap most of the gains, but that is because they own the robots.

    So, what is the solution? Pretty straightforward, actually: own the robots! As luck would have it, we live in an age in which it has never been easier for anyone to invest in the future. This implies, of course, that people are smart enough to forego buying that luxury condo and partying away their paycheck in favor of planning for the day that that paycheck won't be there any more. I admit, I may be assuming too much about the average person's capacity for delayed gratification.

    --
    Might makes right irrelevant.
  20. Re:so what? by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Numbers mean nothing.

    Let's make it where people can spend their time tending public spaces, working basic infrastructure projects, or maintenance, or interesting high tech endeavors and have assurance of a decent place to live, raise a family, food and medical care. I don't give a damn what numbers you put on the scenario - provide for shelter, security, and well-being in exchange for tending to something that needs doing. If nothing needs doing, great - just don't take away people's shelter, security and well-being because somebody fucked up the quarterly forecast again.

    If there's stuff that needs doing that nobody is interested in or apparently qualified to do, break out the incentives - higher pay, better benefits, lower working hour demands, whatever floats the boats to get qualified people to pick up those tasks instead of tending the local park garden.

  21. Don't give banks any ideas. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Funny

    What if your ATM could not only give you a hundred bucks, but sell you an adjustable-rate mortgage?

    Some people take so long at the ATM I wonder WTF they are doing - international banking, hostile takeover - what, What, WHAT? Jesus! So please don't give the banks any more ideas for ATM functions.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  22. Re:so what? by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Turn up your sarcasm detector, it looks like you've got it set to negative gain.

    First, the majority of Americans didn't even vote in the Trump-Clinton election, 580 million people live in North America, 420 million more in South America, just under 130 million Americans voted in the election, and, as you point out, only 45.9% of them voted for the Trumpinator - so, I read the 2016 election as a "thumbs up" from roughly 6% of the American population in favor of Trump's image and policies. I'd wager much more than 7% of Americans would have voted against him, given the chance.

    I used to work in small companies, where response to government oversight seemed like a huge burden on top of whatever it was we were trying to do. Now I work in a larger corporation where well over half of our resources are devoted to satisfying government oversight requirements - entire departments full of people who do nothing else, and all the other departments spend significant amounts of their time serving the needs of the regulatory departments. Oversight is necessary, and I think with strong transparency requirements the burden could actually be lessened, but it's no joke that we're already employing a huge number of people who do nothing but document and audit how other people work.

  23. Re:so what? by Enigma2175 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If the AI/automation revolution actually happens then labor will no longer have any income on which to pay tax. For some time, productivity gains have accrued with capital and labor has gotten the short end of the stick. This is a bug in capitalism but we have largely worked around the bug through progressive taxes and inheritance taxes. However, if AI and automation replace all labor then capital no longer has a reason to keep labor around. Since the people with a lot of capital largely control the government don't expect any help from that quarter.

    In the past automation has made people more efficient and enabled many new jobs to come into being. This time it's different, formerly automation replaced our muscles and we moved from manufacturing economies to service economies and let the automation largely do the manufacturing work. This time, the robots will be replacing our brains rather than our muscles and there won't be service jobs to switch to. More and more people will lose their jobs and be unable to find new ones while capital continues to increase their hold on the available money and power, creating a feedback loop where all capital ends up with a small portion of the population. Unless we do something now (while labor still has some power) we are unlikely to stop this from happening.

    --

    Enigma

  24. Re:so what? by Pfhorrest · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The way corporate profits and taxes are handled in the first place should be completely refactored.

    100% of corporate profits should be paid as dividends, with automatic reinvestment of those dividends in the corporation (at a rate settable by each shareholder, defaulting to 100% reinvestment) in exchange for a greater share of the company (compared to those who opt not to reinvest).

    Dividends are taxable, so the investors pay the tax, each at their own marginal tax rate (so small investors with meager incomes trying to save for retirement aren't taxed out the wazoo, but if some one individual personally owns vast swaths of the productive economy, they are).

    Don't tax the corporation itself at all, because all of its profits are already being taxed at the shareholder level.

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  25. Re:so what? by Pfhorrest · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A basic income plus a flat income tax with no exceptions creates a centerward pressure toward the middle class. Tax everyone x% of all income no matter what, give everyone x% of the mean income as a tax credit, people who make the mean income see no difference, people who make below it get money, people who make above it pay for that.

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  26. Re:Sure they can by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just like how a malnourished serf couldn't stand up to a well fed Knight in armor.

    Ask the leaders of the malnourished French of yesteryear how that went.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"