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Automating Ourselves To Unemployment: How shortsighted policies are creating a long-term crisis
Peak Prosperity ^ | 04/28/2016 | Adam Taggart

Posted on 04/28/2016 2:51:54 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Students of Austrian business cycle theory are familiar with the term malinvestment. A malinvestment is any poor use of resources or capital, commonly made in response to bad policy (usually artificially low interest rates and/or unsustainable increases in the monetary supply). The dot-com bubble that popped in 2001? The housing bubble that similarly burst in 2008? Those were classic examples of malinvestment.

With this article, I'd like to introduce a related term: malincentive. While not part of the official economic lexicon, I consider a 'malincentive' a useful word to describe any promise of short-term gain whose long-term costs outweigh any immediate benefits enjoyed. The temptation to urinate in one's pants on a cold winter day to get warm is a (perhaps unnecessarily) graphic example of malincentive. Yes, a momentary relief from the cold can be achieved; but moments later, you'll have a much larger problem than you did at the outset.

Malincetives and malinvestment go hand-in-hand. In my opinion, the former causes the latter. As humans, we respond remarkably well to incentives. And dumb incentives encourage us to make dumb investments.

In this current era of central planning, malincentives abound. We raced to frack as fast as we could for the quick money, while leaving behind a wake of environmental destruction and creating a supply glut that has killed the economics of shale oil. Our stock exchanges sell unfairly-fast price feeds for great sums to elite Wall Street high-frequency-trading firms, and as a result have destroyed investor trust in our financial markets.  The Federal Reserve keeps interest rates historically low to encourage banks to lend money out, yet instead the banks simply lever up to buy Treasurys thereby pocketing vast amounts of riskless free profit. The list goes on and on.

One particular malincentive has been catching my attention recently, one that feels especially pernicious because it does not seem easily reversible, if at all. For US employers both large and small, it's becoming increasingly less appealing to employ human labor. 

The High Cost Of Labor

The cost of a human employee is much more than just the salary he or she receives. There's:

The above combined typically result in a cost between 1.25-1.4x a worker's base salary. But this is not the 'all-in' cost.

There's also the cost of office space, equipment, management & supervision, training. Of HR services. Of paid time off. Of lost productivity if a worker turns out to be a bad hire. Simply put, people are expensive to employ.

But the situation is getting even worse. Employers of every size are experiencing a growing surge of additional costs in regards to their human workforce.

The recent push to dramatically increase the minimum wage over the next several years is currently being hotly debated. However, one thing that is not up for debate is that this rise will make the cost of labor substantially greater for businesses -- especially smaller businesses, as a greater percentage of their employees are at the minimum wage level. For instance, the hike to $15/hour now legislated for California and New York represents rises of 50% and 67% respectively from current levels. Businesses will not be able to absorb that labor cost increase without reducing headcount, raising prices and/or cheapening quality. Likely some combination of all three.

Similarly, the Affordable Healthcare Act requires businesses with 50 or more employees to offer health care coverage or face penalties:

Under the health care law, employers with 50 or more full time equivalents are considered "large businesses" and therefore required to offer employee health care coverage, or pay a penalty.

However, employers who are close to reaching 50 full time equivalents are encouraged to closely monitor their workforce, as reaching the threshold and not offering health care coverage can result in steep penalties.
 
(Source)

What's the natural reaction to this if you're a small business owner? Do everything you can to keep headcount under 50 employees. Fire people if you must. Create part-time positions instead of full-time ones. Outsource. Automate.

The cost of complying with workplace safety regulations (estimated by some to cost US businesses over $65 billion per year) is jumping, too:

A 2016 “bombshell” is likely coming from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which is expected to increase fines more than 80%.

Thank Congress for the “catch-up” increase—OSHA’s first since 1990—that quietly got tucked into a bipartisan budget act in November. The law allows all federal agencies with civil penalties to update fines for inflation. OSHA can increase fines up to 82% and has until August 1 to do so, says Duane Musser, vice president of government relations for the National Roofing Contractors Association.

Musser considers the increase an almost a foregone conclusion. And based on testimony from OSHA assistant secretary David Michaels, that seems accurate.

(Source)

To these, add compliance costs for the Americans With Disabilities Act -- which do little to prevent predatory lawsuits designed to shakedown small businesses.

All in all, regulations have been calculated to place a burden in the $trillions per year on American individuals and businesses:

The Regulation Tax Keeps Growing

Blame Washington, not China, for the decline of American manufacturing

Updated Sept. 27, 2010 12:01 a.m. ET

This distribution of regulatory costs places small firms at a substantial competitive disadvantage. The cost disadvantage confronting small business is driven by environmental regulations, tax compliance, and occupational safety and homeland security rules.

In sum, individuals and businesses bear the burden of the $1.75 trillion cost of regulations, and small businesses bear a disproportionately large share of the compliance costs. Businesses must close, reallocate activity, absorb, or pass on the expense of complying with regulatory requirements.

Then, there's the hassle factor. Employees require oversight. Management. Development. They get sick. They take leave. They quit. Some do their jobs well; some don't. Things can get messy, and not infrequently, litigious.

The Drive To Automate

Given all the above, is it any wonder that businesses are desperately looking for ways to replace human labor with automation? Forget about profitability, it's becoming about survival. 

As a result, capital investment in automation (robotics, artificial intelligence, etc) is exploding:

Automation does come with higher upfront capital expenditures, but with the vast savings resulting from removing the fully-loaded costs of human employees, the profit incentive to swap bodies for bots is tremendous. And as robotic and AI technology quickly gets better and cheaper, the siren song only sounds sweeter over time.

The categories of jobs that can be displaced by automation is impressive and expanding. Many industries once considered 'safe' now find themselves in the cross-hairs of progress. We have technology now capable of resolving real-world customer service calls, or landing rovers on Mars -- or a freaking comet, for that matter. The 2013 Oxford University study The Future Of Employment calculated that a full 47% of total US employment is at risk of being replaced by 'computerization'.

How safe is your job from being displaced by an automatic solution that performs it better, faster, cheaper -- without complaints, meals, vacations, sick days, bathroom breaks, benefits, regulatory obligations, and the rest?

Fuel On The Fire

Here at PeakProsperity.com, we write often about a coming 2008-style correction (or worse) as the multiple asset bubbles blown by the world's central planners go bust. Assuming for a moment that we're correct in that forecast, we'd see millions of jobs shed again as companies fight to stay above water.

What kind of investments will companies make in that kind of environment, when dollars are particularly dear? Answer: the kind that improve a business' cost structure -- that give it more runway, more time, to claw back to health. Automation will be at the top of this list. It's very easy to calculate the expected return of technical capex (i.e., making it easier for the C-suite to approve), benefits can usually be seen quite quickly, and the up-front investment cost can often be amortized on an accelerated basis (reducing the optical impact on the P&L).

As we've written, we think the worm has already turned, and that we are heading back into recession. There has been a stealth series of mass layoffs since the beginning of the year from major players in Tech, Energy and Finance - with Intel recently joining the list last week, announcing it's shedding 12,000 jobs.

The thing to realize -- in fact, the key point of this entire article -- is that jobs lost to automation don't come back. Human labor displacement is a one-way trip. Once an industry has invested in mechanical infrastructure and moved up the efficiency curve, it doesn't ever abandon that investment.

The High Cost Of Human Displacement

There is an intelligent debate to be had on the benefits of automation. Many have argued that the march of technology has always left future generations with more wealth and more meaningful work to do, as the laborious drudgery is increasingly mechanized.

Others warn that "technological unemployment" (a term coined by the economist Keynes) is not costless, and creates suffering among the lower-skilled workforce who lose their means of income. Keynes called technological unemployment a "disease" resulting from "our discovery of means of economising the use of labour outrunning the pace at which we can find new uses for labour.”

What is much less debatable is that displacing a large percentage of human labor without a plan in place to put that displaced labor to productive use is a sure-fire recipe for long-term crisis.

Our current trajectory has us hollowing out our workforce at an alarming rate. Unskilled labor needs a place of entry in order to build skills and work experience. Yet we are closing that door. Where are the young workers to get their start in a world where the largest employers simply don't need them?

We are already seeing signs that this hollowing out is well underway:

1 in 5 American households has NOBODY with a job living in it.

The labor force participation rate has been in steady decline since the Tech revolution started in the late 1990s:

The youngest workers, Millennials, are earning 20% less than the previous generation, and are drowning under $billions and $billions of education debt.

So many families are having difficulty getting by that nearly half of US households receive part or all of their income from the government:

The percentage of Americans now receiving a federally-funded “means-tested program” now stands at 35.4%. When you add pensions, unemployment, Social Security, and Medicare to the mix, the percentage of Americans relying on government for part or all of their subsistence is 49.5% of the American population.

(Source)

The statistics above show that we are badly failing at putting our current excess human capital to productive use. Even with today's 5% unemployment rate (yeah, right), we already have a national employment crisis.

What will things look like in 5 years, when millions of today's jobs have been vaporized by the automation wave?

Plan For The Inevitable

Automation is going to happen. And personally, given the extreme set of malincentives we currently subject businesses to, I expect the pace to only quicken from here.

So what to do?

From a societal standpoint, I think Nobel Economics Prize recipient Michael Spence has it right (full disclosure: Spence was the dean of my business school during my years there). He warns that the challenge of technological unemployment "will require shifts in mindsets, policies, investments (especially in human capital), and quite possibly models of employment and distribution."

It certainly will. The big question is: Will we, as a society, identify and adopt these mindsets/policies/investments/models in time? Sadly, my money is on that we won't. We haven't made much progress in doing so to-date, and the hour is getting quite late to act before crisis arrives.

Which is why, here at Peak Prosperity, we advise taking individual action to avoid being run over by the automation juggernaut:

~ Adam Taggart



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: automation; jobs; unemployment

1 posted on 04/28/2016 2:51:55 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I for one will happily give up my job to a robot. SOB can have it and deal with all the dumbasses and government bullshit I do each and everyday. Rust in my chair you steel bastard. LOL


2 posted on 04/28/2016 2:57:37 PM PDT by KSCITYBOY
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To: SeekAndFind

So uh...who will the robots sell their crap to when the humans don’t have jobs?


3 posted on 04/28/2016 3:03:18 PM PDT by Regulator
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To: Regulator

That’s the rub, isn’t it? Capital costs for automation are dropping like a rock right now, so it’s definitely coming.


4 posted on 04/28/2016 3:18:17 PM PDT by Eisenhower Republican (Supervillains for Trump: "Because evil pays better!")
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To: KSCITYBOY
"I for one will happily give up my job to a robot."

But will robots pay taxes ? Come on folks, fight back to stay employed ! If you work, you pay taxes and my Social Security check keeps coming every month! I have kind of grown accustomed to that eagle flying every month.

5 posted on 04/28/2016 3:22:54 PM PDT by buckalfa (I am feeling much better now.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The US should produce most all that it consumes so remaining jobs will be performed in the US by US citizens.

But if automation eliminates as many jobs as some forecast, we’ll eventually have a monstrous, centralized, redistributionist government. And we’ll have some form of socialism as a tiny group of super-rich will not be allowed to own and control all the factors of production while the large majority own little or nothing.

Will the large number of people with no source of income be allowed to have children? How many?


6 posted on 04/28/2016 3:25:32 PM PDT by Will88
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To: SeekAndFind

I can’t believe companies are worse off today then in the older years. Companies don’t give pensions, vacation days, matching funds, or anything hardly. The CEOs sure do alright though.


7 posted on 04/28/2016 3:28:14 PM PDT by napscoordinator (Trump/Hunter, jr for President/Vice President 2016)
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To: SeekAndFind
This has little to do with "policy" and everything to do with technology. The overarching global socio-economic problem of the 21st century will be how to transition to a post-employment economy.

For most of human history, very few people had "money" as we understand it today. It is only since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution in the late 18th century that the foundational equation of modern economics was developed:

labor = money

It used to be "If you want to eat you have to work" but this changed to "If you want to eat you have to have money" combined with "If you want to have money you have to work". A subtle but powerful change.

The emerging robotic economy will be so productive that very few people will have to "work" in any traditional sense. But currently we have no way to rationally distribute the fruits of that productivity to those who don't have "jobs". This is the Star Trek paradox. Their society wanted for nothing but nobody had "money" or "jobs" in any sense we'd recognize today.

Not having a job doesn't imply idleness. People will still have "careers" in the sense of lifetime pursuits, it's just that technology will enable such pursuits to be decoupled from the need to survive (or thrive).

If you want a Nobel prize in economics, figure out a convincing solution to this paradox that doesn't collapse into some form of dystopia in short order by allocating all of the robotic output to an elite oligarchy that runs a planet-wide welfare state of peasants (essentially the New World Order's vision of the future).

8 posted on 04/28/2016 3:47:04 PM PDT by AustinBill (consequence is what makes our choices real)
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9 posted on 04/28/2016 4:29:03 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Ted Cruz, "But it's what plants need!")
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To: SeekAndFind

10 posted on 04/28/2016 4:37:04 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Strawman #351)
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To: Jeff Chandler

With the $15 Minimum Wage, your last day might come pretty soon ...


11 posted on 04/28/2016 4:38:57 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: AustinBill
Interesting reply.

As someone who for years had a career automating manufacturing processes, and believes in automation and simplification at my very core, I do it all the time and to be honest most everyone does.

Is it easier to measure once, line all of them up and drill the holes before you assemble? Or is it better to drill the one and assemble that then go find out where you left the tape measure? Hmmm, what was the size?

The boogie man isn't in finding the easiest way, robot or whatever, it's in wild assed competition at the lowest possible levels competing with huge money interests who monopolize everything they see that is good.

Free enterprise and capitalism must come from bottom up, not top down.

12 posted on 04/28/2016 4:54:00 PM PDT by WhoisAlanGreenspan?
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To: SeekAndFind

they forgot the cost of employee lawsuits for ridiculoous reasons...


13 posted on 04/28/2016 5:01:51 PM PDT by rolling_stone (1984)
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To: rolling_stone

I can’t stand unreliability of low-end workers; everyone has something come up once in a while, but when working a full week becomes a rarity then something has to change. People are entitled to sick & vacation time, but when they routinely use them all up quickly (and still miss a lot of work afterwards - just without pay) then automation looks even more attractive.

Machines may break, but they won’t hide in the bathroom on cellphones or antagonize co-workers...


14 posted on 04/29/2016 4:03:45 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: SeekAndFind

Funny what with this huge ‘debate’ going on with Carrier and whosoever packing up and going to another country.

I seem to remember Carrier as a SYRACUSE NY (area) company that fled NY and its outlandish taxes and draconian Union goings on. (As for years Manufacturers left New England and moved to Dixie - and when the ‘bad things’ caught up with the companies, the next move was out of the country).
When R Limbaugh moved his operation from NY to FL some idiot (Cuomo or the sitting GOV) in NY actually said - Good riddance to bad rubbish as they were losing a pretty good chunk of money by his departure.

Jf’nKerry the Patriot (heard he served in Vietnam) lived in MA and berthed his Yacht (Made in ????(not USA)) in RI because less taxes.

Again, the other day while clumsily putting my card in the new reader and after the second attempt (goes on an angle not straight in?????) I turned to another ‘SC’ in line and proclaimed...
“I always shied away from the job of Cashier because I didn’t want to mess with Credit Cards, Money and figuring change etc.” (OF course today they are NOT cashiers or even employees, they are Sales Assistants (put the card there) and workers (although if I have to process my own card, who is doing the ‘work’?)

The young lady gave me the ‘look’ (Actually they don’t realize that MY generation ‘invented’ the ‘look’) you know - Hey ‘Old Man/Woman’ how did you ever survive this long’?

I looked her straight in the eye and LOUDLY said - (you know the line ALWAYS gets longer when there is a ‘dummy’ at the front of it)

“You must feel pretty good training ME how to use YOUR replacement”

I don’t remember which generation figured they should start off as President or CEO of the company (Surely not ours) and I do seem to remember the flock of ‘youngsters’ that arrived at my job site - looking for work - that didn’t know which end of a broom to use BUT admittedly they did figure out the the ‘big thing on the end’ was better on the ground when it came to leaning on something.

Never thought I would have the wherewithall to look at my grandson complaining about college— where he gets to expand his Baseball playing a few more years— and not mentioning what I was doing at the same age...etc etc etc...

Of course MY grandfather and his generation had the same thoughts about me and ‘us’ (well we ALL know ‘I’ was the ‘apple of my grandfathers eye’ and could do no wrong)
Yes, the more some things change, the more they remain the same.


15 posted on 04/29/2016 4:39:17 AM PDT by xrmusn ((6/98)"Pols headstone- Please bury me not so deep so I can continue to fleece the sheep")
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