by Sixstrings » Sat 10 Oct 2009, 12:39:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('OilFinder2', 'U')m, people have been complaining that machines and technology would take away all our jobs since the Industrial Revolution began. Ever heard of Luddites (the original ones)? If they were right we'd have run out of jobs for humans to do long ago.
I get your point, Oily, but I just think the degree of techno-displacement is worse than in times past. And just as computer processing doubles exponentially every few years per Moore's law, jobs too are eliminated at an exponential pace, through increased productivity and efficiency.
Do you see what I'm getting at? The microprocessor revolution is different from the industrial revolution.. in the industrial revolution, workers were still needed in the factories. But the jobs we're losing now are just flat out eliminated, never to be replaced.
You see, we're on a trend line which requires less and less employment. You see this at the banks, where ATMs have eliminated a big chunk of the teller jobs. And at the supermarket, more stores are going with the self-checkout (where you have one receipt checker where you used to have 4 cashiers). And something as simple as having the cashier bag the groceries has eliminated untold numbers of bagger jobs (only one store in my town now has baggers.. this used to be a major source of employment for teenagers and disabled/elderly adults).
Robots have replaced workers on factory lines, and we now even have surgical robots.
How long before the Japanese make a robot that can flip burgers at McDonalds? Probably sooner than you think.. right now, they're working on robots that can work as CNA's to help care for their aging population.
Now you can laugh and say who wants to work these crap service jobs anyway (teller, cooks, phone workers, admin clerks), but fact is this all there is available for tens of millions in this country. You can't just say "sorry, go starve we found a computer that can take these calls."
It's not just advance in computers and outsourcing, we also have the efficiencies of economies of scale -- a town that used to have a Main Street now has a Super Walmart. Mergers go on and on, forever increasing efficiency and eliminating jobs.
Oily, do you not see that there is a terminal point of endless efficiency? We're at that point now.. we are TOO PRODUCTIVE.. we need to be a lot less productive. Just look at the jobs numbers.. there are not enough jobs out there, and it just gets worse every month.