by KaiserJeep » Mon 05 Dec 2016, 01:28:13
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', 'H')ere is where we disagree Kaiser on a fundamental level. You see ever increasing automation as inevitable. I see it as a deliberate choice encouraged by certain sectors of the governments around the world.
Would you also ignore economics, Tanada? Automation exists because it is more profitable than human labor when large scale production is required.
There is also the pressing matter of overpopulation. Those in the most desperate need of salaries are in developing nations, and have multiple children. But the system reinforces itself as these folks exist on the cusp of starvation - they are not middle class consumers as are the citizens of developed nations. When most of your income goes for food, even warm clothing, shoes, and a roof to shelter under are secondary considerations. Nor can they afford the education to appreciate the conundrum we have or the luxury to think about anything but raw survival.
The developed nations have consumer demand for all the glitzy manufactured goods and personal services. Who doesn't enjoy power tools, electronic toys, fast cars, luxury vacations, and the like?
Yet the destruction of the Middle Class is also the destruction of the main consumer class. The system is contracting and will do so ever faster as time passes. Meanwhile, those who automate need not pay salaries, just invest in capital equipment. They make each such decision in isolation, even the elites who own all are powerless to stop the economy from contracting.
I see what is happening as just a symptom of the end of cheap energy. Automation reduces human errors, saves energy, requires no commuters, reduces labor costs, increases product quality, and inevitably - reduces the number of humans employed.
Those obsolete humans that we are oversupplied with, that would be. Governments cannot fix this, I believe.