Only the little people’s jobs.
Later.
>> Though the “creative destruction” process works hardships on some people who lose their jobs and are forced to take lower-paying jobs, any attempt to impede the process would make all of us worse off.
Overall, automation is a GOOD thing. Very few people want to spend 8 hours a day doing the same repetitive task.
But from the standpoint of an individual person whose job is lost to automation, it’s a bad thing.
So, do we resist automation out of compassion for that individual who is losing his job? No. If we did that, we’d still be propping up buggy whip factories.
The guy who loses his job has a number of options: Retire. Retrain. Move to a place where his job exists but isn’t automated. Take a different job. Go on welfare. Did I miss some?
I Navigated Navy P-2s and P-3s for 20 years. The P-8 also has a flight navigator/radioman. The civilian equivalent disappeared several decades ago, replaced by automation.
Both large and small businesses have been running lean for the last fifteen years or so.
Why would you employ twenty people when ten employees have proven that they can do the job for the last decade and a half? (or ten people when the technology exists to get the job done with five?)
There are very few jobs that cannot be replaced by machines.
The future does not belong to today’s employee. It belongs to those who design, maintain and program the machines that will come into service in the next five years plus.
(Oddly enough, thinking about this a bit more, even these jobs are not secure. With improving technology. Only about 4000 years until the Butlerian Jihad.)
Personally, I don't think it's ever going to substantially increase again.
The idea automation would make our lives easier has been around since at least the 1950s. Yet today two parents work longer hours for less pay to fill houses with crap made in China. Don’t see that changing any time soon.
Nope. Some people will never want robot services.
There will ge tiers of service for all different types and dollar levels of service.
Will big box stores get rid of all other stores? No.
Will internet get rid of all physical stores? No.
There will be some flux and impact but the pie expands.
Williams bump!!
Automatic ignorance developers don’t care a people. They get theirs and don’t care about others. They have less compassion then the machines they create. I say “People who hate people use the self checkout machines”. So boycott the self checkout lanes and save a cashiers job. They are also working on machine to stock the stores. Managers you are next. Having worked as an electronics tech Doctors your jobs are in danger too.
No. Lack of automation will kill our jobs. China is adding robots like crazy and their jobs are growing like crazy. They found a way to make stuff cheaply even though their wages are skyrocketing.
The real question to ask is " Will automation kill us?"
“” “” Because of automation, the U.S. worker is now three times as productive as in 1980 and twice as productive as in 2000. It’s productivity gains, rather than outsourcing and imports, that explain most of our manufacturing job loss.”” “”
That’s a stick with more than two ends. Both outsourcing and automation contributes to a job loss but it does differently.
You shouldn’t listen to new Luddites who are against automation. In 18th century it took a British textile worker three months wage to afford decent shoes. Has weaving machinery Luddites hate so much ruined their industry? The answer is no. It increased productivity and the excess of workers went to other industries which seen similar growth based on the same principles.
In didn’t took months of work for the same worker to afford shoes in 1960s 150 years later not in spite of automation but due to it. Thanks to the automation they could afford homes and automobiles by that time.
Now guess why there is no British textile industry and no related jobs left?
Yes, its gone thanks to outsourcing and it is not automation which is to blame.
The problem isnt the direct net of jobs. It is the speed of change of jobs is accelerating beyond what it has usually done in the past.