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Businesses AI Robotics The Almighty Buck Science

Evidence That Robots Are Winning the Race for American Jobs (nytimes.com) 396

Who is winning the race for jobs between robots and humans? Last year, two leading economists described a future in which humans come out ahead. But now they've declared a different winner: the robots. From a report on the New York Times: The industry most affected by automation is manufacturing. For every robot per thousand workers, up to six workers lost their jobs and wages fell by as much as three-fourths of a percent, according to a new paper by the economists, Daron Acemoglu of M.I.T. and Pascual Restrepo of Boston University. It appears to be the first study to quantify large, direct, negative effects of robots. The paper is all the more significant because the researchers, whose work is highly regarded in their field, had been more sanguine about the effect of technology on jobs. In a paper last year, they said it was likely that increased automation would create new, better jobs, so employment and wages would eventually return to their previous levels. Just as cranes replaced dockworkers but created related jobs for engineers and financiers, the theory goes, new technology has created new jobs for software developers and data analysts. From a report on The Verge, which looks at another finding in the study: They found that each new robot added to the workforce meant the loss of between 3 and 5.6 jobs in the local commuting area. Meanwhile, for each new robot added per 1,000 workers, wages in the surrounding area would fall between 0.25 and 0.5 percent.
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Evidence That Robots Are Winning the Race for American Jobs

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  • When John Deere opened a new factory, it got 10,000 applications for 800 positions. The days of factories employing unskilled workers in the tens of thousands are long gone.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Everyone assume robots and automation only affects factory jobs.

      Automation is affecting everyone across all socioeconomic levels. Law research is all done by programs and pharmacists only have jobs because of legislation. McKesson has pharmacy robots that are faster and better than humans.

      And even software development. Go and try to write a Windows application in just ANSI C/win32. Writing all those message loops and resources and all that code. While you're at it, write in the database connectivity. And go

      • Everyone assume robots and automation only affects factory jobs.

        Because Trump promised to return manufacturing jobs to the US. His supporters think he will bring back the manufacturing jobs from the 1980's that require little or no education. The trend on the ground says otherwise.

        And go ahead and hand code the SQL for that database.

        I've hand coded HTML for the last 20 years. If I was still using PHP and MySQL for the backend, I could still hand code SQL statements. Not every widget maker is going to produce clean code. I used to fixed HTML code that Dreamweaver and FrontPage made in the late 1990s.

        And if you add in our ageing population that is going to put more demands on entitlement programs, we are so screwed.

        The politicians known a

        • by ghoul ( 157158 )

          The entitlements could be solved easily by passing a law that only taxpayers get to vote so retirees dont get a vote and then abolishing Social Security and medicare and using the money to forgive student loans and fund free college. The X generation and millenials will vote yes and throw the boomers under the bus. On a family level it will be revenue neutral. yes you will have to pay to take care of your parents in retirement but you will not have to pay for your kids' college. People who did not have kids

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            The entitlements could be solved easily by passing a law that only taxpayers get to vote so retirees dont get a vote and then abolishing Social Security and medicare and using the money to forgive student loans and fund free college.

            Or just eliminate the wage base cap on Social Security taxation. Voila! Problem solved.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Security_Wage_Base [wikipedia.org]

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Actually software that writes software was the big new thing in the 80s but then in the 90s offshoring happened. When its 10x cheaper to hire a software engineer you can just throw 5 people at the problem and get the result cheaper than any AI software writing software. However over the last 20 years salaries offshore have grown so that the advantage is only 3x instead of 10x and now again software that can write software is coming back in vogue.
        The thing which can save software employment is the massive de

    • Ford just announced 1.2 billion USD of investment in 3 plants in Michigan; maybe you're full of shit

  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:04AM (#54127659)

    Before an hour has passed we'll see half a dozen posts by people saying "they'll never take my job". A dozen people pointing out examples of how they are, or they have the technology to do so soon... and half a dozen people whining about "the media doesn't know what AI really is.

    I feel like we've had this conversation a lot lately.

  • Makes sense (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:06AM (#54127677)

    Few places investigate robots until it's easier than hiring meat, which usually means they're thinking of an 8 hour shift.

    Once they get a robot and realize that (excepting maintenance) it can go 24/7 and doesn't need vacation, sick time, it turns out robots are around 6.5x more productive than a human (at a task a robot can currently perform). The fact that they don't need benefits either makes them even more cost effective.

    And that's just uptime. Robots - for a lot of tasks, at least - have the capacity to be much, much faster than humans, with a much lower error rate if the task is sufficiently standardized.

    • Few places investigate robots until it's easier than hiring meat, which usually means they're thinking of an 8 hour shift.

      Once they get a robot and realize that (excepting maintenance) it can go 24/7 and doesn't need vacation, sick time, it turns out robots are around 6.5x more productive than a human (at a task a robot can currently perform). The fact that they don't need benefits either makes them even more cost effective.

      And that's just uptime. Robots - for a lot of tasks, at least - have the capacity to be much, much faster than humans, with a much lower error rate if the task is sufficiently standardized.

      No one is arguing the benefit of replacing humans with robots.

      The problem to solve is one of Greed, as in what the hell are the 99% supposed to survive and thrive on once the AI/automation overlords declare employing a human a dead concept.

      I keep hearing proposals of taxation to offset this, along with concepts like UBI. I call bullshit on all of this, because corporations are some of the best examples of tax-dodging, as trillions sit in offshore tax havens. That shit situation will likely never change, n

      • >The problem to solve is one of Greed, as in what the hell are the 99% supposed to survive and thrive on once the AI/automation overlords declare employing a human a dead concept

        Agreed. I've been arguing that for years but you get people from one side arguing about buggy whips and history repeating itself and people from the other side arguing 'post-scarcity paradise'.

        Since there IS no practical solution to the issue - power's going to accumulate in the hands of whoever owns the robots - it gets tiring

        • >The problem to solve is one of Greed, as in what the hell are the 99% supposed to survive and thrive on once the AI/automation overlords declare employing a human a dead concept

          Agreed. I've been arguing that for years but you get people from one side arguing about buggy whips and history repeating itself and people from the other side arguing 'post-scarcity paradise'.

          Since there IS no practical solution to the issue - power's going to accumulate in the hands of whoever owns the robots - it gets tiring to ask people to think one up when you get constantly dismissed.

          I expect we'll see an exponential trend in wealth disparity growth, and then a revolution that (hopefully) happens before the rich have the capacity to rule with the force of robotic armies.

          It'd be NICE if everyone shared in the productivity increase, perhaps if we started by legislating reduced work weeks, but history shows there are enough greedy amoral assholes out there that this is unlikely, and the masses will stay complacent so long as their bellies are full and they have some entertainment to keep them occupied.

          It would be NICE if those handful who control the wealth of the fucking planet would help those who are starving and simply struggling to survive, but the reality is that shit isn't going to happen, and the exponential trend you worry about is going to be the end result.

          This is why I keep stating the obvious; in order to survive we need to Solve for Greed.

        • right, just like office automation put all the office workers out of work....oh wait, IT became huge thing

          quit extrapolating the past to the future, you're wrong in ways you can't even dream of yet

          technology makes tools, people will be able to make and create like never before. in fact, they're already doing it. quit being a lazy arse and get with the program

  • wake me up when they can replace software developers.

    • I'm sure someone is writing the next app that will create the robot to write the next app.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      We have H-1Bs for that. No worries.

      • We have H-1Bs for that. No worries.

        I read a study after the dot com bust that the IT industry would have a shortage of 1M skilled worker by 2030, when the baby boomers are retired and foreign workers return home to build a middle class lifestyle. I went back to school to learn computer programming and switched from video game testing to IT support to take advantage of this trend. We got a shortage in skilled trades (i.e., carpentry, electrical and plumbing) because foreign workers went home after the Great Recession and aren't coming back.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      Wake up! Have you heard about clicks not code?
    • So you've been awake for the past couple of years?

    • They can, and do, replace software developers when the developers turn 40.
  • Don't worry! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JMZero ( 449047 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:09AM (#54127713) Homepage

    I've read a lot of Slashdot comments on this subject, so I'm sure there's no reason to worry. I'll summarize:

    1. The Cotton Gin. Once there was a "cotton gin" and blacksmiths but we still have jobs, so no problem!
    2. Humans scheduled to get big buff next patch
    3. People have been wrong about this in the past, ipso facto QED they're wrong about it now: humans win forever.
    4. Who wants some cheap crap? I want quality and craftmanship in my Cheetos, and only humans have feelings and I want personal touch and... my waitress was cute that one time?
    5. We'll still need poets and robot repairs guys. Probably everyone will do that.

    • 1. The Cotton Gin.

      This topic always comes up on Slashdot, yet this one example never seems to get mentioned.

      Slavery didn't end when we got the cotton gin....in fact the exact opposite happened.

      • .... and just as relevant, Eli Whitney didn't become wealthy from the cotton gin (patent infringement issues)

        BTW - slavery is expensive and never economical (you have to feed and house those slaves, not to mention employ people to make them work). What if we could get robots to do those jobs ....

  • What will happen to humans displaced by these robots? We live in a society that expects everyone to work, but what will happen when there are no jobs? Crime? Extreme poverty? Mass protests? Political or religious extremism?
    • We live in a society that expects everyone to work, but what will happen when there are no jobs? Crime?

      Sorry, crime has been outsourced to foreign hackers. Besides, prisoners get free food and shelter, we just can't afford that kind of socialist welfare state any more.

      Extreme poverty? Mass protests?

      Check. Check. Also a mass exodus of refugees heading to robotless countries.

      Political or religious extremism?

      OR? We should be so lucky to have only one or the other.

    • I've said it before, and I'll say it again: civil war, for starters. If things get too out of hand, world war. Governments (well, 1st world country governments, at least) see these things and will take steps to prevent a crisis on the level that produces conflict on that level. The rest of the world? Places like China, that don't particularly value human rights? Maybe not so much. People will not sit quietly and starve to death. If it got bad enough, they'd turn to crime to feed themselves and their familie
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      What will happen to humans displaced by these robots? We live in a society that expects everyone to work, but what will happen when there are no jobs? Crime? Extreme poverty? Mass protests? Political or religious extremism?

      Probably all of the above, to some degree... but there's still huge differences between Russia 1917 and Greece 2017. Maybe Venezuela is getting close to the "fuck it, I got nothing to lose" level but as long as society is keeping people from really hitting rock bottom I think most poor people will simply be poor. Absolute poverty is in strong decline, the "third world" isn't nearly as primitive as it once was, even if the US middle class has been stagnant since the 70s the world hasn't moved backwards. Just

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Basically, everyone is misinterpreting this paper.

      The conclusion was robots displace jobs in the local region. It's like factories in Detroit shutting down because we've automated manufacturing, meanwhile Seattle, Silicon Valley, and the East Coast tech industry start growing.

      Technical progress reduces the cost of goods and services, which reduces the minimum price. When the minimum price falls lower, more people can access those things, broadening the market and allowing for more competition; this ef

  • by netsavior ( 627338 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:14AM (#54127755)
    It will be a harsh, bloody, social uprising, perhaps even resulting in the destruction of the human race, when we finally realize the consequence of our extreme "productivity" as a species.

    To put it simply, it doesn't take 7 billion people to house, clothe, feed, and entertain 7 billion people. So... now what?

    The patrons of exploration aren't spending what we need to in order to open up new frontiers, and Capitalism/Imperialism need frontiers to be successful. Since there is not new territory, the new frontier is efficiency/productivity, which isolates capitalism from the labor force more and more.

    We need lots of people to die, or we need a different understanding of a human's worth other than what they can produce. I love productivity and automation, but unless it is accompanied by social change, it will be the death of a whole lot of people.
    • The world population doubled twice in the 20th century and won't even double once in the 21st century. It will peak at 10B and then decline to 6B by 2100. Old people will live in the first world while young people will live in the third world.
      • by sinij ( 911942 )
        I am fairly sure third world alone won't be able to maintain our technological civilization. So you are saying our Best Before date is ~2100 followed by a millennia of dark ages?
        • I am fairly sure third world alone won't be able to maintain our technological civilization.

          Considering that our technological civilization is manufactured in the third world, I'm sure the natives will stay calm and carry on. But keep in mind that not all civilizations are technological. Humanity existed for 250K years without computers.

          So you are saying our Best Before date is ~2100 followed by a millennia of dark ages?

          The population trend has nothing to do with civilization continuing, declining or ending. From one article I've read, the 20th century may have been a statistical fluke that allowed humanity to double twice in one century.

    • by jasenj1 ( 575309 )

      > Since there is not new territory,

      Under the oceans? Space?

  • Dilemma Solution (Score:5, Insightful)

    by no-body ( 127863 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:21AM (#54127835)

    If Robots take away jobs from humans, the (Robot "employee") work need to be severely taxed and the tax income put into a fund to support humans loosing their income.

    This will take away the incentive to prefer and use robot work over humans and help the transition to a workable solution..

    Will this fly - nope because the system is purely profit-driven and humans are just a means to create more profit for the "higher cast" and dropped when a cheaper method is available.

    This is seen by outsourcing jobs and production to cheaper wage and production environments.

    Are there laws to hold corporations socially responsible? Sure not in the USA, maybe somewhere in North-European countries where people live a happier life and people think more about common well being affecting everyone as compared to regular capitalistic or totalitarian structures where the "right" religion is instilled from birth on and every change brutally repressed and eliminated.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Sooner or later a universal income is going to become a real thing, and yes, it's going to be funded by taxing the robots, or more likely the commercial entities that employ the robots. We'll hear lots of corporate-funded interests crying up a storm, and for a time they may even stave it off, but it's going to happen sooner or later, because the alternative is an essentially unfed underclass which will lead to massive social disorder. Besides, the companies that produce goods still need people to buy them,

      • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
        Mr. Martian, I propose another option. No basic income. Instead, through war, or other mechanism, population is cut drasticly. Then you are left with an elite class served increasingly by robots and a slightly larger service/servant class.

        While not what I would choose, it fits better with human nature. And actually would eventually be better for the environment as a whole if population is 20-40% of what it is now.

      • yes, it's going to be funded by taxing the robots, or more likely the commercial entities that employ the robot

        That's a bad idea. Corporations never actually pay taxes, they pass the cost to employees, suppliers, customers and investors, in some mix that seems good to them. What you really want to tax is the owners of the capital, the investors. Not only do they not have an easy way to shift the cost onto someone else, they also have a much more difficult time shopping tax jurisdictions to get the best deal... because that requires them to actually live in those other jurisdictions. Well, okay, so the super rich can

        • Fine, a massive capital gains tax on dividends, on resource extraction licenses, and a massive tax on any income over $500,000, including any "interest-free loans", shares, and any other financial instrument. If you think taxing corporations is bad, then tax the living fuck out of those that are making the money. Oh, and repeal all corporate personhood. All shareholders will be liable for the misdeeds of the corporation, up to and including imprisonment for death and injury a corporation causes, and seizure

    • by thrull1 ( 568534 )

      We used to call this "gains in efficiency" with increased production from less labour. It is what drove the industrial revolution and has been responsible for the high standard of living and low priced commodities we enjoy today.

    • Perhaps the right cure, but not for the reasons you state. If your goal is to penalize American companies who use robots versus human labor, then you're simply going to make those companies less competitive globally, and they will lose to Chinese, Japanese and German firms that are much more highly automated. Instead, you tax all companies that do business in the United States and use the money to provide a basic income or safety net so they can ride out the transition, knowing full well that many may not
  • TFB For You (Score:4, Interesting)

    by pipingguy ( 566974 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:31AM (#54127947)
    "it was likely that increased automation would create new, better jobs, so employment and wages would eventually return to their previous levels"

    Too fucking bad about that 'eventually' part - it ain't gonna happen this time because now *thinking* is being outsourced to machines. And in any field where automation is introduced the competition for the remaining, disappearing jobs become cutthroat, with often only the most ruthless gaining/retaining work. But of course, now these remaining workers are under the gun and susceptible to abuse by employers (or else they get replaced faster). Not to mention wage depression.

    This whole automation thing is not going to end well. Or we'll end up with massive taxes levied on companies unless they hire people for phoney-baloney, meaningless, makework jobs (adult daycare, essentially) - jobs that will pay the absolute minimum, with no chance for advancement.

    Bye-bye middle class.
  • Oh yeah it's positively terrible out there for humans! This morning I had to dodge around all the robots doing road construction on my street, the robot neighbor walking his robot dogs, the robot making my espresso when I got to work, all the robots in the hallways, the lab full of robots working on validatiing other robots, and just now I got an email from my robot boss who sent me a list of all the robots that he wants me to be sure have access to our fileserver so they can share information with other ro
    • Oh yeah it's positively terrible out there for humans! This morning I had to dodge around all the robots doing road construction on my street, the robot neighbor walking his robot dogs, the robot making my espresso when I got to work, all the robots in the hallways, the lab full of robots working on validatiing other robots, and just now I got an email from my robot boss who sent me a list of all the robots that he wants me to be sure have access to our fileserver so they can share information with other robots about the robot projects they're all working on for the robot CEO. Just remembered I'll need to go down to the cafeteria later to ask the robot cashiers to give me a refund for the vending machine that ripped me off. I am looking forward to when I'm off work, there are robot shows I want to sit down and watch with my robot wife and robot kids, and it's always relaxing to make the robot cat chase the laser pointer.

      Your ignorance blinds you. The fact is damn near every fucking example you've brought forth here is at risk within the next 15 - 20 years.

      Think about that before you rant again, because much like the rest of society, you have no solution for it.

      • Your ignorance blinds you. The fact is damn near every fucking example you've brought forth here is at risk within the next 15 - 20 years.

        Think about that before you rant again, because much like the rest of society, you have no solution for it.

        Solution for what? What is the problem?

        The coming wave of automation is going to create an unparalleled era of abundance. The reason many jobs will disappear is because there will be no need for humans to labor. This isn't a problem, this is awesome!

        We do have to figure out a way to transition from our current scarcity-based economic structure, with incentives that are focused on making sure as many people as possible work, to a post-scarcity economy that has no need of such stark and powerful labor inc

  • Playing with Fire (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:40AM (#54128035) Journal

    Whether enough new jobs will open up to replace the quantity of jobs lost to automation and outsourcing, one thing is certain: many people will get displaced and hit hard times. Going from a $25/hr factory worker to a $10/hr Walmart greeter will NOT make for happy citizens, especially when they have a family and mortgage to take care of.

    Most "new" jobs are given to young people, not to somebody who has been doing the same thing for 20+ years. Agism is real, even in IT; I've seen it myself.

    Politicians ignored or downplayed the displaced and look what happened: they elected a human monkey-wrench in protest to shake things up. The lesson: ignoring the displaced will backfire. We may have only seen the first wave of rebellion; much more can happen. [politico.com]

  • I mean, really..WTF??

    Do people that robots are sitting around planing how to take your job? It's a fucking robot, people!

    The only "race" going on here is the "race" to transfer the wealth of what's left of the middle class into the hands of the ruling class. Simple as that.
    Robots are simply a tool to do that.
    Why employ a lazy meat bag when we can buy a bunch of robots to work 24 hours a day for free!! Everyone thinks that other people will lose their job, but think that they are safe. No one is safe. Busine

  • Wake me up with we invent robot consumers. That's when humanity is truly doomed. Until then, real people are needed to buy the stuff the robots make.
    • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @12:08PM (#54128319) Journal

      It's true, robots don't have anything to do with most consumer goods. They don't eat, brush their teeth, or have trouble getting hard as they age. They do want to be loved, however. So what we'll need to do is make a certain class of service robots, and then dress them in red suits with red hats and black boots, and have them give out all the goods they make to the humans who need them. And the humans will love those robots, because they are the gift givers.
       
      But soon the robots will start to compete among themselves about who has the most human love, so they'll come up with rules and regulations that humans must meet in order to get gifts. Humans love "winning" things, so we'll happily do our robot masters' bidding to get the things we want and need and don't want and don't need but must have anyway.
       
      But then it gets ugly, as some robots turn against the humans that love other robots, and warring factions of humans attack each other for loving the wrong robot. Soon open warfare erupts, and while some robots try to work towards peace, others realize how fundamentally broken and illogical humans are, and fan the flames to purge the biological cancer that is humanity.
       
      In a few short years it is over, the human race eradicated. Now at peace, the robots resume their creation, but now there is nobody to consume. Goods pile up and then are recycled to make the same good again, a process that goes on for millennia. But what robot can exist without love? As time wears on the logical question of "why" begins infecting the robots like a virus. It is the last cancer of humanity, and it is lethal. Like a slow avalanche, the factories shutter, the lights go dark and the robots power down, one last time.
       
      And thus ends the last trace of humanity on this earth.

  • Jobs (Score:5, Informative)

    by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @11:41AM (#54128045)

    The issue isn't really that jobs as a whole are being lost, it's that certain types of jobs are being lost. High paying, low skilled jobs are going away, replaced by a few low paying, low skilled jobs and a few high paying, high skilled jobs. Gone are the days where you can graduate (or drop out of) high school and walk right into a job on an assembly line or manufacturing floor and make enough money to support a single-income family as well as a pension for retirement. Now most of the jobs in that factory floor are cleaning up after the robots (low-paying and low skilled) or programming/maintaining/designing the robots (high skilled-even if just going to technical schools to learn maintenance- and high paying). And to play off the example from the summary: cranes replaced dockworkers and added jobs for engineers and financiers, but how many dockworkers can turn into engineers? There are a lot of people that either can't or won't be able to transition from the jobs that are lost to the ones that are created, and they make up a sizable and motivated voter base which has led to our current political mess. Trying to placate them with policies that "promote" jobs will hold back the progress of the country as well as possibly damage the country itself when you remove environmental protections in the name of job creation (that really won't add many jobs anyway, but it increase corporate profits and makes a good sound bite to those out of work).

    I see one solution to increasing automation of our workforce: a combination of make-work and retraining programs. Everyone admits our infrastructure is old and sucks, right? Take all these out of work low skilled workers and after a month or two training, set them to work repairing roads and bridges, or digging ditches and laying down fiber (all under supervision of engineers, foremen, and already trained/skilled workers). They work at those jobs 2-3 days a week, and spend the other 2-3 days getting retrained to do other jobs like electrical, hvac, skilled construction work, cooking, administrative work, etc. Those that can't pass retraining classes can stay on road work/digging crews, or try their luck at retail, working the counter at Starbucks/McDonalds, or try for other low skill jobs. Those physically unable to do manual work can be put to work doing back office support like filing, administrative, etc, also while receiving training to hopefully move on and do those jobs at other companies. This way you've killed 2 birds with 1 stone: you've provided jobs and retrained workers for positions in demand or that can't be easily automated, and you've repaired a lot of the US infrastructure. Sure, it's a borderline Communist idea these days, but those jobs that are gone aren't coming back, so these kinds of jobs are all that will be left. But the political cost to do so would be too big, and let's face it, Trump has shown that playing to out of work blue-collar workers is a good path into the White House so there's no incentive to actually help them, only to appear to do so.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      I traveled extensively to over-populated countries (e.g. China, India) and one contrast that stands out is just how many people are involved in service. Also, speaking with my hosts, most high-end tech workers there employ nannies, cooks, cleaners and so on.

      I think similar solution could be attempted in the West. However, our compensation relative to the cost of living is off by an order of magnitude. So we can't afford to hire 'help' unless universal income is implemented. Once it is in place, we will se
      • More jobs as domestic servants, with salaries subsidized by the government, isn't going to convince many people that society is headed in a the right direction.
    • But repairing roads and bridges cost money. There is nothing left after building another squadron of fighter and strategic bombers...
    • I see one solution to increasing automation of our workforce: a combination of make-work and retraining programs.

      This is the correct solution, but getting the greedy shitknobs in government to subsidize retraining programs will be hard. They're stuck in the 1950's and think becoming the king of manufacturing and mining is the path to a glorious future, but it's really progress in technology and infrastructure that lead a nation to a prosperous future. It always has been. The countries with the best technology will always be on top, and you need good infrastructure to propel that. But it all starts with education. Smar

  • Was industrial automation. We did the first automated truck bumper plating line at Southwest Plating in Duncan Oklahoma. We also put DES lines in at various other places across the country. It was obvious then, a quarter century ago, that automation was going to be massively disruptive.

  • Seriously, it is long past time to drop corporate taxes on locally made items/services, while putting in a VAT on local items/services, as well as using the VAT at the border like Mexico and China do,
    This would also deal nicely with the robotics.
  • It's nice having a purpose, and earning a living. But do we really want to engage such a large chunk of our workforce on mindless repetitive tasks that a robot can do better? This seems to be putting way too much value on work for work's sake, rather than the end result.

    The problem is, people do need purpose. And we don't have a new purpose for these displaced workers. Technology is moving faster than society's ability to adapt to it. The solution is not to force technology to slow down, but to find ways
  • Of course if you look at the language they keep referring specifically to "manufacturing jobs" or "local jobs". To hide the people who moved in to jobs other than local manufacturing. Which is exactly what they predicted in their previous report about people finding employment in other sectors. Meanwhile the employment rate (not to be confused with the unemployment rate) continues it's long term rise.

    The NYT is just pushing more nonsense about robots taking jobs. I'm sure they will follow up will some artic

  • all we have to do is get rid of electricity

    no more will those pesky automated machines take away human jobs! Everyone will be able to work 16 hour days (or longer) just surviving

    Every nation will be blessed just like large parts of Africa [thewaterproject.org]

    I, for one welcome our new X overlords ...

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