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Economists Worry We Aren't Prepared For the Fallout From Automation (theverge.com) 365

A new paper from the Center for Global Development says we are spending too much time discussing whether robots can take your job and not enough time discussing what happens next. The Verge reports: The paper's authors, Lukas Schlogl and Andy Sumner, say it's impossible to know exactly how many jobs will be destroyed or disrupted by new technology. But, they add, it's fairly certain there are going to be significant effects -- especially in developing economies, where the labor market is skewed toward work that requires the sort of routine, manual labor that's so susceptible to automation. Think unskilled jobs in factories or agriculture.

One class of solution they call "quasi-Luddite" -- measures that try to stall or reverse the trend of automation. These include taxes on goods made with robots (or taxes on the robots themselves) and regulations that make it difficult to automate existing jobs. They suggest that these measures are challenging to implement in "an open economy," because if automation makes for cheaper goods or services, then customers will naturally look for them elsewhere; i.e. outside the area covered by such regulations. [...] The other class of solution they call "coping strategies," which tend to focus on one of two things: re-skilling workers whose jobs are threatened by automation or providing economic safety nets to those affected (for example, a universal basic income or UBI).
They conclude that there's simply not enough work being done researching the political and economic solutions to what could be a growing global crisis. "Questions like profitability, labor regulations, unionization, and corporate-social expectations will be at least as important as technical constraints in determining which jobs get automated," they write.
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Economists Worry We Aren't Prepared For the Fallout From Automation

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  • by bigdavex ( 155746 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @10:23PM (#56883532)

    This story hadn't been posted all week.

    • What about it? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @10:33PM (#56883572)
      aside from climate change this is the biggest issue facing the human race this century. We've built a civilization around the notion that if you don't work you don't eat and we're about to run out of work. Productivity gains are already biting into wages. If minimum wage had kept pace with inflation it'd be > $20/hr. Instead it's about half what it was in the 70s inflation adjusted.

      I keep hearing they'll be new jobs. But what I see is high paying factory jobs being replaced by low paying service sector jobs. We keep ignoring the fallout from the last few industrial revolutions. Luddite wasn't always a casual insult, it was a movement in response to job loses from new tech. It took 80 years for more new tech to catch up to the job losses from the last industrial revolution. This is fact, look it up.

      Finally I get the people who kid themselves and say it's not a problem. What I don't understand is all these folks acknowledge the problem and shrug saying "laissez faire". Seriously, when in your life has the best answer to a complex problem been to ignore it and hope it all works out for the best?
      • Re:What about it? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @12:31AM (#56884082) Journal

        Americans LOVE Capitalism and HATE government!

        Instead of being so angry and frustrated and voting for Bernie it meant supporting Trump and blaming their problems on Mexicans and China etc.

        It will be very hard if not impossible in my country to vote for socialism. We have been brainwashed by 1950s RedScar McCarthyism, Ronald Reagan, Cold War with the USSR, and FoxNews to change. It is ingrained in our thinking to always fear government and view any handout as theft.

        So your solution won't work.

        • Re:What about it? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @05:14AM (#56884824)

          Socialism, the real thing, wont happen any time soon, it really need genuine economic distress, the sort you see south of the border before people decide keeping the rich rich and the poor poor is not working out so well for them. Marx pretty much said effective socialism arises out of peoples self interest (And specifically as a class of people poor folks basically deciding theyve had enough and banding together to solve it). As it stands Americans have too much invested in capitalism to want it to go away completely.

          However hybridized social-welfare systems are both plausible but also effective. Europe, Australia, Candada, etc all have similar histories of strong investments in capitalism, but have also adopted degrees of welfare to ensure people dont fall completely out of the net with health and basic living standards.

          At some point politicians will be forced to realise that either they get a decent welfare and healthcare system in, preferably a universal minimum wage or some income tested variant, or people will start lighting things on fire or pointing guns at politicians.

          • Re:What about it? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @09:14AM (#56885594) Journal

            Dude. I am am American.

            People here would rather die than to give up their guns, expensive and worthless health premiums and their paychecks than to fund fellow free loaders in their minds even if it's against their own self interests.

            We were founded with a great distrust of authority. The south hates any government because it took their rights to own slaves away. Reagan taught Americans to fear any government as evil. McCarthy as well. Australian and Canadians genetically are cousins but it stops there. We are different and not similar at all. The majority hate here think just how I described and view Marxism as the enemy since we were children during the cold war.

      • by Ignatius ( 6850 )

        > Seriously, when in your life has the best answer to a complex problem been to ignore it and hope it all works out for the best?

        More often than I can count. Here in Austria, we even have a word for it: "aussitzen".

        Also, there's a whole class of arbitrarily complex problems - mostly political in nature and involving attention seeking and vocal minorities seeking more than their fair share of power - where ignoring is the proper and only solution.

        ignatius

  • With this bleak outlook i'm so glad i fell into a career in automation. Dollars are rolling in these days and no end in sight.
  • Who is going to pay for a full UBI in a third world nation?
    The factory owner will get to:
    Use robots in their own nation and block a UBI tax politically/legally.
    Any smart nation will offer no UBI tax and the ability to use robots.
    Move to another nation where they don't have to pay for a UBI tax and build a new factory with robots.

    In a nation with a fixed product and the political drive for a UBI? Time for a color revolution. Go full coup.
    No factory, land owner is going to allow a new UBI to
    • by Lennie ( 16154 )

      UBI is not that much more expensive than current taxes IF implemented as a replacement.

      A bigger problem is, when everyone has UBI how will prices develop ?

    • "Who is going to pay for a full UBI in a third world nation? "

      That's not the problem. Even the poorest nation on Earth has enough resources to print all the money they want.

      The problem, of course, is that money on itself means nothing so just printing money and giving it away leads nowhere else than inflation.

      What you need is, of course, creating wealth and sharing that wealth on a way that, at the same time, is fair in a social way and doesn't disincentive those creating that wealth.

      In the last two centur

  • Not really (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Kohath ( 38547 )

    Economists take the posture of pretending to worry about automation. They are playing to (and condescending to) an audience.

    In truth, Economists know that automation and the associated productivity will make life much better, just like it always has. Automation is why you aren’t at the stream beating your dirty clothes against a rock to clean them. It’s why you aren’t manually grinding grain between 2 flat stones to make an edible paste right now.

    Economists know that watching over a bun

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • "Why is automation better?"

        It is not. Automation is only better up to the point is cheaper and less conflictive.

        Right now, automation is always less conflictive and it's more expensive only where you can have human labour at semi-slavist conditions (i.e.: China). So, right now, you can avoid automation as long as you allow to downgrade your live status to Chinese standards. And even China-like status is in danger: automation is not going to be more expensive but the other way around, cheaper and more perv

    • Tell that to the Trump voters in Michigan, Indiana, and Wisconsin who all lost their jobs or still work for 1/3 they used to 30 years ago?

      Automation helps the factory owners and rich investors. Reality is you don't count.

    • by Lennie ( 16154 )

      Any economist will agree with you on: technology grows the pie like nothing else.

      There are 4 problems:

      - This will benefit some people, many more times than others. Which can be fine (it's not important how much 'the 1%' makes), unless the lowest paid don't get paid enough anymore.

      - Everyone always says: new types of jobs will be created. Well, it has happened so far, the worry is: what if it doesn't happen ? Which law of nature or any other can give us these guarantees ?

      - 4% unemployment might or might not

      • This will benefit some people, many more times than others. Which can be fine (it's not important how much 'the 1%' makes), unless the lowest paid don't get paid enough anymore.

        If humans were rational, it wouldn't be important how much the 1% makes. In reality absolute inequality does cause social unrest, even if the lowest have more than kings of centuries past (which, arguably, is the case now, much less in an automation-heavy future that makes everything dirt cheap). The fact is that we are a status-seeking species, and although we not only allow but almost demand a certain level of inequality, so that there is status to seek, when inequality gets to be too great it generates a

    • Re:Not really (Score:5, Insightful)

      by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @07:33AM (#56885164) Journal

      In truth, Economists know that automation and the associated productivity will make life much better, just like it always has.

      Your argument is a strawman which misses the point. Obviously economists understand that massive automation will create equally massive gains in productivity, causing prices to plummet and goods to be abundant. This isn't the topic of the debate. The topic is what to do about the fact that our current model for distributing goods and services is based on the notion that labor is scarce and that people must be motivated to work. Automation makes labor abundant and may ultimately remove the opportunity for many people to work, and under the present system, if they don't work, they don't get to eat (or, more accurately, they're forced to grovel to a massive, sneering bureaucracy for the opportunity to eat, barely).

      This means that continuing our current approach looks like it will create a rather dystopian future, which means that we really should be thinking hard about alternatives. The paper argues that we're not putting enough effort into the latter.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      Economists don't want to take the good-new side of this issue because the last few times they gave the thumbs up and the good news about macroeconomic shifts, entire towns got hollowed out when their jobs went overseas and we got stories about how 50 year old factory workers would be re-training to deploy Juniper border routers and writing software and everything would be OK.

      Instead, we got opioid epidemics, mass unemployment and regional economic destruction and employers bulk imported workers from oversea

  • by DMJC ( 682799 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @11:11PM (#56883738)
    We could dismantle globalisation and start forming trade blocs that enforce minimum standards of workers rights and economic development and only let in other nations that develop to an acceptable level. We could then use these blocs to negotiate how the advanced economies transition to a laborless economy that's fair to everyone.
    • Robots don't need minimum working standards. In a generation you're going to see even the people in countries you want to exclude being replaced by machines. Not even the most cheaply paid labor will be able to work that cheaply.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Conservatives would rather wear drag to church than consider that. It just won't fly in the USA. I'm just the messenger.

  • The point about automation is that there is no point automating jobs that there is no demand for.

    And demand comes from individuals having disposable income to spend on buying stuff. If all their jobs are eliminated and replaced by automation, those people have no money to buy the goods that the automated factories and offices produce.

    Even "government" jobs fall foul of the lack-of-demand situation: people with no jobs don't pay any taxes. And without tax income, there is no government - and no government

  • This is not PC or polite but it's real. Someone has to build and sell and service the robots and automated systems. So programmers, engineers, and other high degree fields will excel. People without degrees would encroach on crappy labor jobs done by illegals in the US because it's not against the law to employ them and they speak the language. Then illegals have no reason to come here and go back to Mexico, where hopefully they focus on fixing their economy and crime problems so they don't feel the need to
  • sure, a lot of manual labour could be replaced, but itâll probably be too expensive and complex over the short term. jobs which can be replaced by software only, though.... i think, the more endangered jobs are typical employee jobs. who kneeds a whole accountants section when the same job could be done by a smartphone app? middle management, phone support, bank clerks, hr, a lot of jobs in law, code monkeys... and this will hit hard, because any accountant or hr manager thinks, it will be the cab d
  • ... for details.

    To me it's pretty obvious: classic capitalism has basically run its course. Modern tribes, a vertical, horizontal and criss-cross melange of belief Systems, philosophies and economic cycles is going to replace it.

    It's happening right now already.

    Right now I'm at the bus stop. Chromebook, Freitag bag, cheap ain't outfit, part-time college student, part time software developer. Now is the guy in that 90000+Euro Porsche at the red light better off than me? Maybe. He looks skinny and in good shape so he probably has the discipline to lead a good life. He's roughly my age, probably has a beautiful wife and grown kids. I "just" have a cute girlfriend and a grown daughter. We both have access to the best healthcare in human history (I'm in Germany, in case you're confused), I'm typing this on my Android phone that costs less than 3 days off work for me and is just as powerful as a supercomputer from my childhood. And as his iPhone that costs 3 times as much.

    The lines that separate both Mr. Porsche and me are blurring. He's in a traffic jam and has a 70 hour workweek. I'm on the bus now, having spent the morning chilling and having slow sex and now going to a college lecture.

    Post scarcity economy.

    The bazillions of national dept just as the bazillions of market cap are basically thin air. Money is losing its worth, which is why we've had negative interest for years now (EU money). The machines will do the work and hopefully the teenage Indian/Bangladeshi girl who made the t-shirt I'm wearing will get to do the exact same stuff I'm doing right now when she's grown up.

    My 2 eurocents.

  • by TJHook3r ( 4699685 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @04:45PM (#56888636)
    Western govts don't seem to look beyond the next 5 years. Automation will see govts topple all over the world. Good time to be a far-right candidate :(

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