After some cautious toe-dipping by Google in a well-publicized
series of experiments on public roads in California and Nevada, other more
serious players are now eyeing the waters of driverless cars. According to a recent New York Times report, automakers
including General Motors, Volvo, Infiniti, Mercedes-Benz, and Tesla have either
already fielded limited-capability "lane-keeping" features in their
high-end models, or plan to unveil more advanced systems soon that will allow
complete hands-off driving under a wide variety of conditions. Absent a flood of new restrictive
legislation, which hasn't happened so far, it is fairly safe to say that the
autonomous vehicle is just a few blocks down the road and heading this
way. Is this a good thing, and if
so, for whom?
Danny Crichton, a Ph. D. student in the Harvard John F. Kennedy
School of Government, thinks it is.
Writing in a recent issue of National
Review, he waxes rhapsodical over the benefits of automation past and
future, and has this to say about driverless cars: "Perhaps no technology has
more potential to improve our quality of life than the autonomous car. We will be able to relax during our
commutes, reducing our stress and improving our health. Autonomous cars could almost instantaneously
deliver a greater number of goods and services, such as meals, household
supplies, and home-maintenance services, giving us more leisure time."
Crichton clearly writes from a perspective in which driving is
just one more daily chore we have to put up with on our way to our real job of
teaching or administrating or studying for our Ph. D. from Harvard. Rather oddly for a person who
researches labor economics, he never once mentions an occupation by which about
one out of every forty employed persons (2.4%) in the U. S make their
living: professional truckdriving.
If you are a sober, responsible family man (or woman) who
couldn't cut the grade in college but want to make a decent living by working
hard, truckdriving is one of the more attractive jobs. Especially with the recent oil boom
fueled by fracking technology, truckdrivers have been in great demand. For a while there were billboards on
I-35 in Central Texas advertising large signing bonuses for truckdrivers
willing to go to work in the oil fields.
While the hours are long, the work stressful and sometimes dangerous,
and time at home is limited, millions of truckdrivers earn enough to support a
family. Many of them are members
of minority grouns, and quite a few own their trucks, making them entrepreneurs. Almost every dump truck I see servicing
a construction site around Central Texas has a sign on it with the Hispanic
surname of the owner-operator.
I don't know when, or if, trucking companies will go to
autonomous driving systems.
Because of their specialized skills and responsibilities, long-distance and
heavy-equipment truckdrivers may be the last cadre of humans to yield the
driver's seat to a robot, long after all passenger cars have turned into mobile
Internet lounges. But operators of
delivery fleets would like nothing better than to turn their personnel headaches
into autonomous-vehicle maintenance accounts. There remains the question of who or what picks up the
package from the back of the UPS truck and carries it to your door, but
quadcopters are waiting in the wings for that. I'm not sure how a quadcopter will ring a doorbell, but by
then maybe we'll have wireless doorbells.
Local delivery service is one of the applications that Mr. Crichton
explicitly envisions as being done by autonomous vehicles.
Human beings have an obscure but persistent longing for
permanence. If we find a good
thing, we want it to go on indefinitely, and that goes for jobs as well as
other things. But it's generally a
bad thing to use legislation or union muscle to artificially preserve specific
categories of jobs in the face of technological changes. This kind of thing carried to an
extreme produces the antique-car museum that is Cuba, and stifles the
increasing technology-fueled productivity that Crichton praises in his article. If increased productivity means we can
do more with less, the economy as a whole benefits, but some people stand more
of a chance to benefit than others.
Today's truckdriver in an earlier time might have been my
grandfather's iceman, who routinely lugged 300-pound blocks of ice around in a
horse-drawn wagon and hauled chunks of it into kitchen iceboxes. The electric refrigerator eliminated
those jobs by the 1950s, but at the same time the trucking industry grew and
eventually supplanted rail as a dominant form of goods transport. And it takes a lot more truckers than
it does railroad workers to deliver the same amount of stuff.
So far, autonomous-driving technology is expanding into what the
New York Times terms a regulatory
vacuum. A few states have passed
laws either licensing or restricting such cars, but in most states it is still
neither prohibited nor explicitly allowed.
Eventually, a driverless car will be involved in a fatal
accident. We may or may not hear
about it, depending on the skill of the automaker's PR people. But whenever such an accident becomes
public knowledge, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will then
receive its legal warrant to examine the whole issue of autonomous
vehicles. The outcome of its study
will be critical to the question of whether the technology will continue to be
deployed smoothly and cautiously, or whether labor groups such as truckdrivers
who feel threatened by it will seize on the incident to mount a crippling
regulatory attack that will stop the technology in its tracks. If that happens, the nation as a whole
may end up the loser.
The growth of a new technology is a fascinating thing, bound up
in both technical and social issues that can hinge on small but critical
events. The next few years will
show whether driverless cars make it big and relieve most of us from what is
often a burden—and whether they relieve thousands or millions of professional
drivers of their jobs.
Sources: Danny Crichton's
article, "Fear Not the Robot," appeared in the May 4, 2015 edition of
National Review, pp. 34-35. The May 2, 2015 online edition of the New York Times carried the article
"Hands-Free Cars Take Wheel, and Law Isn't Stopping Them," by Aaron
M. Kessler, at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/03/business/hands-free-cars-take-wheel-and-law-isnt-stopping-them.html. The statistic about the number of
professional truckdrivers in the U. S. was from the website http://www.alltrucking.com/faq/truck-drivers-in-the-usa/. And my grandfather really did run an ice
plant for a number of years in the 1930s.
I personally am dying to see someone ask us to finance a driverless car. It's a technology that a lot of us in the industry are anxious to see more of because of the possibilities it holds in store!
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