The ways that
people make a living today are very different from what they were a generation
ago. In 1970, Detroit was still a
bustling manufacturing metropolis, thousands of women earned a decent living as
telephone operators, and many newspapers provided employment to linotype
operators who spent their days at the keyboard of a clunky pile of machinery
that molded molten type metal into sticks. Needless to say, you will have problems finding a
manufacturing job in Detroit these days, and the other jobs are history
too. Furthermore, engineers played
an essential role in these changes, and leading the charge are those engineers
who made computers and information technology the chief engine of creative
destruction over the last few decades.
And we are by no
means done, according to a report by some Oxford researchers that was mentioned
in the online magazine Salon.com recently. Carl B. Frey and Michael A. Osborne studied the U. S.
employment picture and used sophisticated (and undoubtedly computerized)
data-grinding methods to discover that almost half of current U. S. jobs could
eventually vanish as they are taken over by "computerisation."
Some parts of this
forecast are easy to believe. If
experiments by Google and others succeed in replacing human car and truck
drivers with robot drivers, long-distance truckers, bus drivers, taxi drivers,
and anybody else who gets paid to drive something somewhere will have to find
something else to do. Among the
ranks of engineers themselves, this sort of thing has been going on for decades
too. If you look at old
photographs of the offices of large engineering firms in the 1970s, one of the
most typical images is that of a huge open room filled with row after row of
drawing boards, each one with its white-shirted male engineer. The output of a roomful of engineers at
drawing boards can be matched today by one modern engineer armed with CAD (computer-aided
design) software. The processes
are so different that they are not directly comparable, but obviously, today's
engineers have very different skills than the engineers of 1970, many of whom
were little more than glorified draftsmen. But is all this real cause for concern? Or are we looking at the problem from
too narrow an angle?
What so often goes
completely unmentioned in discussions of technological unemployment, is the
question of anthropology: what is
your model of the human being? I
think the model that most secular economists and researchers use is something
like this. All life is basically
economic in character, and the ultimate good in this life is a smoothly
functioning economy, wherein everyone capable of contributing to it works to
the best of their ability and receives in turn the material benefits of their
work. That is a nice picture as
far as it goes, but as a philosophy of life it's somewhat lacking.
For a completely
different take on technological unemployment, you should read one of a number
of works that were popular in the 1930s.
Even in the teeth of the Great Depression, writers such as C. C. Furnas
in The Next Hundred Years went into
optimistic technophilic raptures about how the increasing efficiency and
productivity brought about by technological advances would let most people earn
all the money they needed by working only one or two hours a day, leaving the
rest of the time for leisure pursuits such as art appreciation and charitable
work. We have certainly gone
beyond Mr. Furnas's wildest dreams of increased productivity. So what went wrong with his vision?
I'm not entirely
sure, but one factor seems to be the social consensus of what kinds of work and
lives are to be desired, and what kinds are to be disparaged. A short list of the occupations that
are admired and envied in the U. S. today might start out like this: movie stars, rock stars, the wealthy (regardless
of how they made their money), sports figures, politicians (a few, anyway), . .
. and it's going to be a short list because for the most part, we don't have
true heroes anymore, just people who are famous for a bit and then fall victim
to that favorite journalistic enterprise, The Mighty Brought Low.
An even more
important reason for the problem that most people seem dissatisfied with their
occupational lot in life is that respect for ordinary, non-intellectual,
perennial jobs that are nonetheless useful to society has largely vanished from
the scene. This disrespect can do
tremendous psychological damage to those who hold such jobs, which in any
economy is going to be the majority of workers. Take janitors, for instance. Janitorial work is the classic
job today that "don't get no respect," in Rodney Daingerfield's
phrase. But it was not always thus.
My first job,
outside of being paid by family friends, was sweeping the floor in a sign plant
in Fort Worth, Texas. It took me
just about all day to work my way around the band saws, the bending brakes, and
the vacuum molding machine. There
was no air conditioning, no breaks except for lunch, and by the time five
o'clock rolled around I was ready to go home and flop—no heavy reading for this
boy that summer. But I was
grateful for the work and the pay, and did it as well as I could.
An amazing thing
happened my last day on the job.
They gave me a going-away party, complete with a little cake. I can still see their faces: the grizzled old shop foreman who
showed me the ropes my first day on the job, the skinny bandsaw operator with
slicked-back black hair who always talked about how he'd rather be fishing, the
red-headed cowboy who I saw one day taking liberties with the secretary (it
bothered me until I found out they were married)—they thought enough of my
humble sweeping up after them, to honor me and wish me well in the future.
They did this, not
because I had proved to be in the 99th percentile of floor sweepers nationwide,
but because I had done a simple job with a reasonable amount of
dedication. They saw even such
humble work as worthy of honor, and decided to honor me because I had done it
well.
If that deep
respect for those who do any kind of honest work, technological or otherwise,
were embedded in the ethos and psyche of this nation, the employment picture
would largely take care of itself.
But those in charge of the economy would first have to believe in the
honor of work, and then put their money where their hearts are. And by and large, neither the money nor
the hearts are in the right place today.
Sources: The article "Don't
look back—the machines are gaining on you" by Andrew Leonard appeared in
Salon.com at http://www.salon.com/2013/09/20/dont_look_back_the_machines_are_gaining_on_you/. The Oxford study "The future of
employment: how susceptible are
jobs to computerisation?" is available for download at http://www.futuretech.ox.ac.uk/sites/futuretech.ox.ac.uk/files/The_Future_of_Employment_OMS_Working_Paper_1.pdf. The
Next Hundred Years by C. C. Furnas was published in 1936 by Williams &
Wilkins of New York.
Interview: After this blog was posted, it was carried on www.MercatorNet.com and led to an interview of yours truly with Drew Mariani, host of a talk radio show on the U. S. radio network Relevant Radio. Streaming audio of the interview can be found on the Sept. 27, 2013 download page at
http://www.relevantradio.com/audios/the-drew-mariani-show.
Interview: After this blog was posted, it was carried on www.MercatorNet.com and led to an interview of yours truly with Drew Mariani, host of a talk radio show on the U. S. radio network Relevant Radio. Streaming audio of the interview can be found on the Sept. 27, 2013 download page at
http://www.relevantradio.com/audios/the-drew-mariani-show.
Excellent!!!
ReplyDeleteSteve Sanders