Several days ago Steven Hill
presented at the Graduate Center CUNY in New York his new book “Raw Deal: How the ‘Uber Economy’
and Runaway Capitalism Are Screwing American Workers”. It discusses (according to Steven’s presentation;
I have not read the book yet) the decline of trade unions, the future of jobs
and robotics. It struck me that there are (In his presentation as well as in
most of what we read), when it comes to the future of work, two narratives that
often seem contradictory. There is a narrative of job-automatization and robotics
whereby most of our jobs end up taken by the robots. Then there is a narrative
of people working more and more hours as work intrudes into their leisure time:
instead of taking it easy throughout the day as the first narrative implies, we
would use our “free” time to rent apartments we own or drive our cars as taxis.
According to the first narrative, we are in danger of having too much leisure
time; according to the second, of having none.
Let’s consider the two scenarios in
turn, and separately.
Suppose first that most of “routine”
jobs are replaced by robots. This seems quite possible (from today’s perspective).
If capital replaces labor easily, we shall have the elasticity of substitution exceed
1 (a point argued by Piketty in his “Capital..”), and the return to capital will
not fall in proportion to the increase in the capital/labor ratio. This means
that more and more of net income will belong to capitalists, and thus to the owners
of the robot-producing companies. Suppose Google cars become ubiquitous, and
Google drives (so to speak) out of business Mercedes, Ford, Volkswagen…The money
will be made by the owners of Google.
In that future, the distribution will
move even further against labor, income inequality will increase, unemployment
will be higher and there would be a generalized problem of finding a job. Since
the economy will have become richer (there is just more stuff), there may be
some kind of income support
paid to everybody. The society would look as follows: lots of people at the minimal guaranteed income with loads of free time, the employed with incomes somewhat higher than
the social minimum working mostly in services, and relatively few fabulously
rich owners of the means of productions. Basically, Mark Zuckerberg, personal trainers
and the unemployed guys living in Miami.
How would the alternative scenario
look? There we have robotics as well but what robotics does is to break jobs into
the tiniest possible segments, parcel
off each of these segments to people who are temporarily hired to do that tiny parcel
alone, and then combines hundreds of such tasks in one final product. Instead
of having a worker W working for a company C full time and doing a task T, such
that on the task T there is a bilateral exclusive commitment between the worker
and the company, we would have task T broken into T1, T2,…Tn, and branched off
to workers W1, W2…Wn. Now the workers will in turn each also work on other
tasks and for other employers: so the worker W1 will in the same day work on
tasks T, Z and Y, each for a different company. There would be multiplicity (non-exclusivity)
on both sides: workers will no longer be committed to a single employer, not will
the employer depend for task T on a single worker. Since tasks are so segmented,
it makes it possible to hire less professional and thus cheaper labor, often
using their “free” time. This is why professional
taxi drivers are now being replaced by
guys who spend 1/3 of their workday as sales agent, 1/3 as bar tenders, and 1/3
driving their own cars as cabs. Or why hotels are in competition with people
who rent their own rooms. Or why I might use every minute of my leisure time to
do jobs for which I have no training and that would replace people who have
trained for them and done them for years.
Under that scenario, we should see a
dramatic reduction in specialization (say, vocational education would end),
blurring of the difference between leisure and work, and a pressure on the labor
share. Everybody would be the jack of all trades and master of none. There would
be only limited unemployment (since practically everybody could do some extremely
simple tasks into which all jobs are divided).
But perhaps it may be better to think
of the two scenarios as just one scenario that would combine lots of labor
substitution with heavy segmentation of tasks (and much more intense labor
discipline made possible thanks to automation). In that case, jobs to which we have
become accustomed would cease to exist: lots of today’s functions will be
automated, and for many others, “amateurs”, not professionals, would do them.
And we should not be making the “lump
of labor” fallacy: the amount of jobs is not limited to the jobs that we know
today. There will be entirely new jobs that we cannot even imagine. Steven gave
one such example that exists already now:
“invisible girlfriend”. People pay to receive, at some intervals, text messages
which are ostensibly sent by their girlfriends. In the eyes of other people
their esteem goes up: many girlfriends compete for their attention. In reality,
some mustachioed guy in short sleeves is writing these messages and getting paid
for them. Or to give another example: women whose job is to be surrogate
mothers to either gay couples or heterosexual couples who cannot have kids.
Now, that job did not exist until recently, that is until (a) legal changes
allowed for surrogate motherhood (and also for gay marriage) and (b) technological
progress that made “artificial” insemination possible. When I give this example, people often ask me:
but can male auto-workers from Detroit become surrogate mothers? No, but this
is always the case in the transition period when the occupation is on its way
out. But after a while there would be no more auto-workers at all, and yes, some
women can become surrogate mothers and have that as their main income-earning job.
Technology will create new jobs, and if
anything, I think we shall have more to worry about not having any free time
than having too much. As commercialization of our lives progresses, we shall perceive (as we already do) every hour spent,
without directly or indirectly contributing
to more money as wasted. Unemployment will become impossible. Being
unemployed implies that you are specialized and that there is a (relative) shortage
of such specific jobs. But not so in a
new economy: everybody can carry Thai food from one place to another, everybody
can exhibit himself or herself naked on the Internet, everybody can open doors,
pack bags, or even write blogs. No one would be unemployed and no one would
hold a job.
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