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Friday, July 24, 2015

The Coming Surplus Population Boom

From an article at The Washington Post entitled: "We need a new version of capitalism for the jobless future," by Vivek Wadhwa.
I am optimistic about the future and know that technology will provide society with many benefits. I also realize that millions will face permanent unemployment. I worry that if we keep brushing this issue under the rug, social upheaval will result. We must make the transition easier by providing for those worst affected. In the short term, we will create many new jobs in the United States to build robots and factories and program new computer systems. But the employment boom won’t last long.

Within 10 years, we will see Uber laying off most of its drivers as it switches to self-driving cars; manufacturers will start replacing workers with robots; fast-food restaurants will install fully automated food-preparation systems; artificial intelligence–based systems will start doing the jobs of most office workers in accounting, finance and administration. The same will go for professionals such as paralegals, pharmacists, and customer-support representatives. All of this will occur simultaneously, and the pace will accelerate in the late 2020s.

* * * 
The impact of advancing technologies will be different in every country. China will be the biggest global loser because of the rapid disappearance of its manufacturing jobs. It has not created a safety net, and income disparity is already too great, so we can expect greater turmoil there.

But developing economies will be big winners.

In his office in Mexico City last month, I had a lengthy discussion about the global impact with Mexican industrialist Carlos Slim Domit. He had a surprisingly good understanding of the advances in technologies such as computing, sensors, networks, robotics, artificial intelligence, and 3D printing. He spoke of the uplift of society in the developing world through broader access to information, education, health care, and entertainment — and the need to share and spread the prosperity that advancing technologies will create. He predicted the emergence of tens of millions of new service jobs in Mexico through meeting the Mexican people’s basic needs and enabling them to spend time on leisure and learning. He sees tremendous opportunities to build infrastructure where there is none, and to improve the lives of billions of people who presently spend their lives trying to earn enough on which to subsist.

Countries such as India and Peru and all of Africa will see the same benefits — for at least two or three decades, until the infrastructure has been built and necessities of the populations have been met.

Then there will not be enough work even there to employ the masses.
Read the whole thing. The wealthy and the elites are already thinking about this, and I would be willing to bet that a whole lot of their thinking will be around how to get rid of the surplus.

We seem to be headed toward a society similar to that envisioned in Asimov's novel, The Naked Sun, where robots perform all menial tasks, technology has replaced human contact to such an extent that personal interaction is repulsive to the majority of people, and the society rides the thin edge of extinction due to the lack of a desire to reproduce.

1 comment:

  1. "Robots" already perform many menial tasks, or dramatically reduce the time and effort to perform those tasks. In the home, we call them household "appliances." In the factory, machines perform many repetitive or dangerous tasks, and they perform other tasks with a precision that was not practical when those tasks were performed by humans. The prevalence of the personal computer has already dramatically altered the workplace. Secretaries and typing pools have been replaced by the now ubiquitous personal computer.

    Displacement of workers by technology has been going on since the beginning of the industrial revolution. What is harming the jobs of US workers is the wholesale export of manufacturing to places like China and illegal immigration which is completely upending the entry-level low-skill job market.

    I don't share Wadhwa's optimism for advanced technologies improving conditions in third world countries. Social and political conditions have prevented those places from adopting current technologies, and I see nothing that suggests that those countries would benefit from even more advanced technologies.

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