Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Report Card for Donald Trump
(12-26-2016, 12:11 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: If you want to get rid of all the mooching byy getting rid of government assistance and letting private charity help those who are really in need, I'm all for it.

If you think private charity can help everyone you live in a fantasy world, but you are an Austrian Schooler, so I already knew that. Rolleyes
#MakeTheDemocratsGreatAgain
Reply
TNT,


I am all for infrastructure investment.  I said that quite clearly on this thread.  There is indeed ample room for public works, and that investment on this scale would do much to address the competitiveness of the US economy and the (under)employment problem in this country.  

All of that is fine.  What I was objecting to was an open-ended policy of the government providing jobs to people as an end in itself.  There is just too much opportunity for mismanagement, for waste, for an expanding and bloated bureaucracy.  I feel that targeted spending on public works, hiring people to build the necessary infrastructure as efficiently as possible, in conjunction with a broader policy of wage subsidies to alleviate conditions on the lower end of the socioeconomic scale, would be more effective.
Reply
(12-22-2016, 11:13 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: What we saw in the 1970s was that without the spur of international competition, US industries became inefficient and their products dropped in quality while increasing in price.  That's how the Japanese got a foothold in our auto market, of which they own a substantial fraction now.  In the medium to long run, you need competition to maintain your edge.

This is true, though the misevaluation of the Yen had a lot to do with the expanse of the damage.  Our auto industry deserved to get its butt kicked, and it did.  Our consumer electronics industry, not so much. 

Purposely undervaluing their currency is the same trick the Chinese applied in the '90s and '00s, only the purpose was different.  Of course, the mighty captains of industry were more than happy to export jobs if it helped their bottom lines (and bonuses).  We adjusted to the Japanese onslaught, and the same will happen with the Chinese. Of course, the little people who lost in the initial rounds will never get their turn at the trough.  Those spots are reserved.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-22-2016, 11:58 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 12:33 PM)David Horn Wrote:
(12-18-2016, 04:54 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: Certainly the situation now is different; in particular, as Bartlett points out, the situation Reagan was facing was inflationary, and the current situation is not.  Thus he is correct to critique Rubio's strategy of merely duplicating the deflationary supply side stimulus of the 1980s.

My proposal goes well beyond that, however.  For example, to address the wage disparities that have resulted from a supply side easy immigration policy for the past three decades, we need to clamp down on immigration and illegal immigrants.  That will be quite inflationary since it will increase wages, especially at the lower end of the scale.

It will also dampen growth, since it will restrict the labor supply.  To counteract the negative effects on growth, we will need some combination of monetary stimulus and fiscal stimulus.  Since both  the basic wage leveling policies and the monetary stimulus will be inflationary, we will need the fiscal stimulus to be supply side stimulus:  the deflationary effect of supply side stimulus will help counteract the inflationary effect of the immigration policies and monetary stimulus.

I wear a heavy coat and boots in the winter, but that doesn't mean I quit wearing my shirt and pants underneath.

This seems to be an excessively complicated way to achieve your goals.  Three actions can provide the intended results without the need for outside actors to take actions they may elect not to take.  First, raise the minimum wage.  $15 nationally, with a nod to more in high-wage areas, will move low wage earners to actual living wages.  Second, raise taxes on high incomes, and, for heavens sake, eliminate the special benefits that accrue to unearned income and large inheritances.  Third, Start an infrastructure building program that includes old (roads, bridges and the like) and new (smart grid, broadband everywhere, 5G wireless) projects that are truly investments in the economy. 

The rest will take care of itself.  As inflation kicks in, interest rates can be raised.  I'm no fan of the public purse being deprecated to private profits when "crowding out" occurs.  Right now, the public sphere needs far more attention.

My proposal is no more complicated than your proposal:  each has three parts.  I just explained how mine would work in more detail.

That, of course, is because your proposal would not actually work.  Your massive increase in minimum wage, for example, far from helping low wage earners, would simply throw many of them out of work entirely.  Seattle is already seeing negative effects on the job market from the first phase in step of their minimum wage increase to $15, and they've only gone to $10 so far.  By the time they reach $15, half of those jobs will be gone entirely.

The difference between your plan and mine is the difference between 'enabling' and 'forcing'.  For example, trying to raise pay at the bottom by limiting immigration may work, but the numbers have to shift strongly in favor of labor shortages first.  You should assume that the hysteresis will be substantial, and the jobs may be automated away before the shortage arrives.  Raising the minimum wage assures good pay immediately, and also assures an even playing field, because every employer is affected equally. 

Nothing precludes automation, unless there is a policy against it, but the motivation will be less when everyone is getting hurt equally.  Using fiscal policy to create jobs is the only guarantee that people will be helped.  Offering subsidies to private entities hoping they hire people to do things has the same limitation as the previous case: nothing is forced.  Merely hoping for good behavior from profit making ventures  seems futile in the extreme.  Profits always came first.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-24-2016, 09:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-23-2016, 08:42 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Studies that I have heard of say that higher minimum wages increase jobs, because when people are paid better, they buy more and thus create jobs for the businesses.

Higher minimum wages don't cause people to be paid better, though; they just cause people at the low end of the wage spectrum to be put out of work.

... and this statement of 'fact' is based on what?  It's been my experience that employers only hire people if they need them, and the pay they offer is the lowest amount they can and still get the work done properly.  Some low-wage jobs will be automated away regardless: food service being high on the list.  At some point, there will not be jobs to go around ... even make-work jobs.  Does that justify starvation wages?
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-24-2016, 11:51 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-24-2016, 10:30 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(12-24-2016, 09:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: Higher minimum wages don't cause people to be paid better, though; they just cause people at the low end of the wage spectrum to be put out of work.

But, but, who in their right mind wants to work for a penny/hour?  We're in a Neo Gilded age and since there are no large labor unions, that's what sort of stuff will happen.  The real problem is there is no such thing as equal economic power between an individual and Corporate America.  .... Well, I suppose we can supplement our meager wages with massive five finger discounts. Big Grin

If Trump and Ryan do what they promised and institute mandatory e-verify, wages will rise at the low end of the wage spectrum well above the mandatory minimum.  People will still be put out of work, but it will only be the illegal aliens, and they will likely return to their home countries.

This falls into the category of wishful thinking.  Most illegals avoid work that involves a W-2, unless its something no Anglo would do.  Expect massive whining from the hospitality industry, and the farmers too, of course.  BTW, both groups tend to be Republicans.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-26-2016, 09:35 AM)Odin Wrote: But if the wages are too low the person will need government assistance to survive, anyway, which means that the government is essentially subsidizing the business. If you have to pay your workers so little that they can't survive without welfare then YOU are the one mooching off the taxpayer's dime and should not be in business.

Funny how all you right wingers have no problem when so-called "job-creators" are the "moochers".

I endorse this post.  It's never failed to amaze me that so-called conservatives are just peachy-keen about massive subsidies to private companies, when the return on those subsidies is dubious at best.  Yet they scream blood murder when the handouts go directly to those in need.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-26-2016, 12:11 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-26-2016, 09:35 AM)Odin Wrote:
(12-24-2016, 09:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-23-2016, 08:42 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Studies that I have heard of say that higher minimum wages increase jobs, because when people are paid better, they buy more and thus create jobs for the businesses.

Higher minimum wages don't cause people to be paid better, though; they just cause people at the low end of the wage spectrum to be put out of work.

But if the wages are too low the person will need government assistance to survive, anyway, which means that the government is essentially subsidizing the business. If you have to pay your workers so little that they can't survive without welfare then YOU are the one mooching off the taxpayer's dime and should not be in business.

Funny how all you right wingers have no problem when so-called "job-creators" are the "moochers".

If you want to get rid of all the mooching by getting rid of government assistance and letting private charity help those who are really in need, I'm all for it.

Been tried, and the results are poor at best and typically much worse.  The most capable of being charitable are the ones least likely to actually BE charitable.

As Scrooge said, " Are there no work houses.  No prisons?"
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-26-2016, 05:36 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: I am all for infrastructure investment.  I said that quite clearly on this thread.  There is indeed ample room for public works, and that investment on this scale would do much to address the competitiveness of the US economy and the (under)employment problem in this country.  

All of that is fine.  What I was objecting to was an open-ended policy of the government providing jobs to people as an end in itself.  There is just too much opportunity for mismanagement, for waste, for an expanding and bloated bureaucracy.  I feel that targeted spending on public works, hiring people to build the necessary infrastructure as efficiently as possible, in conjunction with a broader policy of wage subsidies to alleviate conditions on the lower end of the socioeconomic scale, would be more effective.

Think ahead.  At most, we are 30 years away from a world where almost all human-supplied work will be unnecessary.  Automaton and AI will cross the line where the automatons are able to create more automatons with limited human interaction.  At that point, the cost of human effort will be almost infinitely higher than that provided by machines.  We need an economic model that still operates in that environment, or chaos will ensue. 

Killing off the non-owners is a non-starter for obvious reasons.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-26-2016, 12:11 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: If you want to get rid of all the mooching by getting rid of government assistance and letting private charity help those who are really in need, I'm all for it.
I would first check with the private charities to see what they have to say about it. My understanding is that they would be overwhelmed, particularly during economic downturns, when donations drop and the need increases.

Not to mention that only 30 percent of charitable donations go to programs helping the poor. The largest chunk goes to religious congregations, which use most of their donations for operations (clergy and staff salaries, rent/mortgage, utilities and maintenance, pastoral activities, and the like). The rich donate the smallest proportion of their giving to the poor; they are more likely to support their alma maters and the arts.

http://articles.latimes.com/2014/mar/30/...k-20140330
Reply
Quote:Think ahead.  At most, we are 30 years away from a world where almost all human-supplied work will be unnecessary.  Automaton and AI will cross the line where the automatons are able to create more automatons with limited human interaction.  At that point, the cost of human effort will be almost infinitely higher than that provided by machines.  We need an economic model that still operates in that environment, or chaos will ensue. 

Killing off the non-owners is a non-starter for obvious reasons.


I understand it is fashionable to say such things, but this claim has been made many times over the past 200 years and has yet to come to fruition.  Did you actually take a look at the info I had posted earlier, showing that the top 3 countries by number of workers per 10,000 manufacturing workers (the US is 7) had twice the number of manufacturing workers as a percentage of the labor force than does the US today?  The Luddites (the orginal ones, mind you) feared that textile machinery would put them out of work, and yet as the Industrial Revolution ground on the number of textile workers soared.  I am presently employed writing automation scripts for data processing (ETL) and reporting, and yet every time I automate one task, the number of tasks soars.  Take one report for one client that was previously generated once a month by hand, write a script for it, and pretty soon they want it once a week, and then daily, then other clients start clamoring for it, and the net amount of work I do remains much the same, even as the output grows.

Why the loud and emphatic insistence that this time is really different?
Reply
I am losing posts or something.  I clearly recall an exchange with Warren about his concept of deflationary stimulus that still makes no sense to me.  I made a post and never got a response. I can't find it now, so I wonder if it got lost and never appeared.  The idea was if you cut a plumbers tax rate he would be incented to cut his rates which would drum up more business expanding his output.

The example was say the tax is 35% and he currently charges $100 an hour--after tax $65.  He gets a tax cut to 20%. So he cuts his rate to $90 an hour, which increases his business by 5%.  He takes home $72, more than the $65 before.  So his weekly income increases from $2600 (40*65) to $3024 (42*72) demand stimulus of $424. His old customers who were paying $4000 for a week of his labor are now paying $3600 for the same, freeing up $400 that can be spent elsewhere for a total demand stimulus of $824.  This comes at a cost of a $600 loss in government revenue for a net stimulatory impact of $224.  Looks great right?

The problem is the incentive calculation is not correct.  After the tax cut, if the plumber would not cut his rates, he will take home $80/hr.  If he then continues to work the same 40 hours a week he will take home $3200, MORE than the $3024 in the example above and do this by working LESS hours.  Why would be cut his rates and take a pay cut? In this case the gain to the plumber is $600, exactly equal to the loss in revenue and there is no stimulus, simply a transfer of money from the state to a private individual.  And unless the private individual spends all of it is will be contractionary.

I don't see how this "deflationary stimulus" is supposed to work.
Reply
(12-28-2016, 02:01 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: I understand it is fashionable to say such things, but this claim has been made many times over the past 200 years and has yet to come to fruition.  Did you actually take a look at the info I had posted earlier, showing that the top 3 countries by number of workers per 10,000 manufacturing workers (the US is 7) had twice the number of manufacturing workers as a percentage of the labor force than does the US today?  The Luddites (the orginal ones, mind you) feared that textile machinery would put them out of work, and yet as the Industrial Revolution ground on the number of textile workers soared.  I am presently employed writing automation scripts for data processing (ETL) and reporting, and yet every time I automate one task, the number of tasks soars.  Take one report for one client that was previously generated once a month by hand, write a script for it, and pretty soon they want it once a week, and then daily, then other clients start clamoring for it, and the net amount of work I do remains much the same, even as the output grows.
SomeGuy has hit on the key that has kept people employed--inefficiency and make work. He works to automate tasks, but it has no net improvement in productivity.  Instead of producing an end output (monthly report) more efficiently, the output is redefined (weekly, then daily, then hourly, then real time?) reports so that the same resources spent on report generation years ago continue to be expended today. Does the greater frequency of report generation create value?  No because everybody else is doing it. It  becomes something you have to do to stay in business (i.e. be competitive) and so really functions like a tax.  Advertising and marketing is the same sort of thing.  About 2% of GDP is spent on advertising and has been for 70 years. New technology requiring massive investments is constantly be applied to task all paid for by this 2% "tax". 

I've seen this at my own work.  As result of guys like me, our production operators are phenomenally more productive in terms of the value of the output they physically produce that they were when I started my career.  As a result there are far fewer of them. Yet employment hasn't fallen. What has happened is they have been replaced by college-educated workers involved in QA, IT, "right first time", safety & environmental, "business excellence", and other functions that either did not exist or were much smaller 30 years ago.  So as when I came here, around 60% of the employees were (smart) guys out of high school who put product in the drum, today maybe 30% are.  Thee kids of the guys 30 years ago got college degrees and work in cubicles and probably have about the same standard of living as their parents.
Reply
(12-28-2016, 02:01 PM)SomeGuy Wrote:
Quote:Think ahead.  At most, we are 30 years away from a world where almost all human-supplied work will be unnecessary.  Automaton and AI will cross the line where the automatons are able to create more automatons with limited human interaction.  At that point, the cost of human effort will be almost infinitely higher than that provided by machines.  We need an economic model that still operates in that environment, or chaos will ensue. 

Killing off the non-owners is a non-starter for obvious reasons.

I understand it is fashionable to say such things, but this claim has been made many times over the past 200 years and has yet to come to fruition.  Did you actually take a look at the info I had posted earlier, showing that the top 3 countries by number of workers per 10,000 manufacturing workers (the US is 7) had twice the number of manufacturing workers as a percentage of the labor force than does the US today?  The Luddites (the orginal ones, mind you) feared that textile machinery would put them out of work, and yet as the Industrial Revolution ground on the number of textile workers soared.  I am presently employed writing automation scripts for data processing (ETL) and reporting, and yet every time I automate one task, the number of tasks soars.  Take one report for one client that was previously generated once a month by hand, write a script for it, and pretty soon they want it once a week, and then daily, then other clients start clamoring for it, and the net amount of work I do remains much the same, even as the output grows.

Why the loud and emphatic insistence that this time is really different?

We are far more capable now than we ever have been.  During my working life, I watched good paying jobs disappear due to the digital revolution, and the answer was always the same: retraining.  Except the window was always smaller.  Retraining requires some level of base knowledge, and the base knowledge changes every 10 years.  So how does this work for a 40 year career? 

Companies are deciding it doesn't, so they are plowing ahead with technology.  Except this time, the basic skills that make us human are being replicated by machines.  Vehicle operators (the #1 low tech job in the country) will be unneeded in 20 years.  Factories are already automated, as are warehouses and most other repetitious activities.  With AI, non-repetitious activities are next.  Why educate lawyers when expert systems can do the same jobs.  MDs are on the same short list, and surgeons are next.

I worked in technology for almost 50 years.  The pace of change at the end of my sojourn was staggering.  Automating away all the jobs that don't require highly advance knowledge and decision making skills (even many that do) means planning for the future of today's children is literally impossible.  We're proud of this, but why?  People are not that flexible that they can tear their lives apart 4 or 5 times, and survive -- to say nothing of thrive.  It will only accelerate in the future.

So yes, the fully automated future will have to arrive, because humans will not be able to survive the pace of change.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-28-2016, 03:11 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-28-2016, 02:01 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: I understand it is fashionable to say such things, but this claim has been made many times over the past 200 years and has yet to come to fruition.  Did you actually take a look at the info I had posted earlier, showing that the top 3 countries by number of workers per 10,000 manufacturing workers (the US is 7) had twice the number of manufacturing workers as a percentage of the labor force than does the US today?  The Luddites (the orginal ones, mind you) feared that textile machinery would put them out of work, and yet as the Industrial Revolution ground on the number of textile workers soared.  I am presently employed writing automation scripts for data processing (ETL) and reporting, and yet every time I automate one task, the number of tasks soars.  Take one report for one client that was previously generated once a month by hand, write a script for it, and pretty soon they want it once a week, and then daily, then other clients start clamoring for it, and the net amount of work I do remains much the same, even as the output grows.
SomeGuy has hit on the key that has kept people employed--inefficiency and make work. He works to automate tasks, but it has no net improvement in productivity.  Instead of producing an end output (monthly report) more efficiently, the output is redefined (weekly, then daily, then hourly, then real time?) reports so that the same resources spent on report generation years ago continue to be expended today. Does the greater frequency of report generation create value?  No because everybody else is doing it. It  becomes something you have to do to stay in business (i.e. be competitive) and so really functions like a tax.  Advertising and marketing is the same sort of thing.  About 2% of GDP is spent on advertising and has been for 70 years. New technology requiring massive investments is constantly be applied to task all paid for by this 2% "tax". 

I've seen this at my own work.  As result of guys like me, our production operators are phenomenally more productive in terms of the value of the output they physically produce that they were when I started my career.  As a result there are far fewer of them. Yet employment hasn't fallen. What has happened is they have been replaced by college-educated workers involved in QA, IT, "right first time", safety & environmental, "business excellence", and other functions that either did not exist or were much smaller 30 years ago.  So as when I came here, around 60% of the employees were (smart) guys out of high school who put product in the drum, today maybe 30% are.  Thee kids of the guys 30 years ago got college degrees and work in cubicles and probably have about the same standard of living as their parents.

OK, but this is not an unknown situation.  Even before I retired, those faux functions were coming under serious scrutiny, and being "downsized" ... some all the way to zero.  There are a few emerging fields that really add value, like IT security for example, but they are the exception.  The real benefit is flattening, with organizational layers stripped out and manager-like duties added to non-managers through the use of digital nannies.

We just don't need all the people any longer.  Most companies use that to add "shareholder value".  When I was hired to the company where I retired, the headcount was just shy of 2,200.  When I retire, it was roughly 600, with some functions outsourced .  Call that an additional 100.  That's still a loss of 1,500 jobs, and the amount of work was roughly the same.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(12-28-2016, 02:48 PM)Mikebert Wrote: I am losing posts or something.  I clearly recall an exchange with Warren about his concept of deflationary stimulus that still makes no sense to me.  I made a post and never got a response. I can't find it now, so I wonder if it got lost and never appeared.  The idea was if you cut a plumbers tax rate he would be incented to cut his rates which would drum up more business expanding his output.

The example was say the tax is 35% and he currently charges $100 an hour--after tax $65.  He gets a tax cut to 20%. So he cuts his rate to $90 an hour, which increases his business by 5%.  He takes home $72, more than the $65 before.  So his weekly income increases from $2600 (40*65) to $3024 (42*72) demand stimulus of $424. His old customers who were paying $4000 for a week of his labor are now paying $3600 for the same, freeing up $400 that can be spent elsewhere for a total demand stimulus of $824.  This comes at a cost of a $600 loss in government revenue for a net stimulatory impact of $224.  Looks great right?

The problem is the incentive calculation is not correct.  After the tax cut, if the plumber would not cut his rates, he will take home $80/hr.  If he then continues to work the same 40 hours a week he will take home $3200, MORE than the $3024 in the example above and do this by working LESS hours.  Why would be cut his rates and take a pay cut? In this case the gain to the plumber is $600, exactly equal to the loss in revenue and there is no stimulus, simply a transfer of money from the state to a private individual.  And unless the private individual spends all of it is will be contractionary.

I don't see how this "deflationary stimulus" is supposed to work.

Trickle-downers like Warren keep promising us a trickle, but it's only a tinkle. Give breaks to businessmen, and they keep their gains. They use it to build factories abroad, or buy other companies, or speculate on Wall Street, or buy luxury goods, or give it to their children. They don't lower their prices. They don't raise their workers' salaries. That has not been happening. Since trickle-down was instituted by St. Reagan, wages have stagnated or fallen, and prices have risen for everything, especially higher education, housing and health care. The only check on prices has come from "free trade" (i.e. outsourcing), which has also meant fewer American jobs and poorer products.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
Quote:We are far more capable now than we ever have been.

A statement that was equally true in 2000, 1990, 1950, 1850, 1700...

Quote:During my working life, I watched good paying jobs disappear due to the digital revolution, and the answer was always the same: retraining.  Except the window was always smaller.

Always, huh?  So I take it then that workforce participation has been declining the entire time you've been working?  Just one long slide down the slippery slope of obsolescence?

Quote:Retraining requires some level of base knowledge, and the base knowledge changes every 10 years.  So how does this work for a 40 year career? 

My father doesn't have a college degree, and learned how to program on uninterpolated punch cars after injuring himself in a trucking accident.  He works for Microsoft.  I have a history degree, and a programming job, using a skill I developed less than year before.  We're managing.  And this is only talking about people working in the tech sector.  Think of the job categories that exist now, that would have seemed exceedingly odd 10 or 20 years ago.  This is less the end of work that you're talking about than it is the end of work as it existed in your memory.

Quote:Companies are deciding it doesn't, so they are plowing ahead with technology.  Except this time, the basic skills that make us human are being replicated by machines.  Vehicle operators (the #1 low tech job in the country) will be unneeded in 20 years.  Factories are already automated, as are warehouses and most other repetitious activities.  With AI, non-repetitious activities are next.  Why educate lawyers when expert systems can do the same jobs.  MDs are on the same short list, and surgeons are next.

So no, you did not bother to look at the info showing that even in the most technologically sophisticated and wealthy countries, manufacturing employment as a share of the population has not collapsed the way it has here.  You're just going to repeat "But they've all been automated away" because you heard it somewhere.  Right.

Has the demand for legal services gone down?  Recent issues in job placement for new graduates seem to have less to do with the inevitability of technological obsolescence as they do the issues and rigidities in the way we train and fund new lawyers, and the restrictions placed on them.

Has employment in the health industry declined while I wasn't looking?  Do manufacturing and logistics jobs to support goods consumed in the US not count as requiring human labor just because it isn't American labor doing it?  Do you have any idea how many people it takes to build and ship an Ipod?

  
Quote:I worked in technology for almost 50 years.  The pace of change at the end of my sojourn was staggering.  Automating away all the jobs that don't require highly advance knowledge and decision making skills (even many that do) means planning for the future of today's children is literally impossible.  We're proud of this, but why?  People are not that flexible that they can tear their lives apart 4 or 5 times, and survive -- to say nothing of thrive.  It will only accelerate in the future.

So yes, the fully automated future will have to arrive, because humans will not be able to survive the pace of change.

Yes, the world has changed over 50 years.  How amazing!
I am missing the bit where you actually, you know, provided evidence that ALL JOBS WILL VANISH in the next 20 years, as opposed to merely asserting that it MUST because PROGRESS!  DO you understand the difference between the two?
Reply
If automation has collapsed jobs in the USA, it will collapse them in Europe and China too in time. If manufacturing is done by machines, fewer people are needed.

Health care jobs are rising. I suspect it may be because of the American lifestyle and diet. The USA has been on the wrong track for at least 37 years. It's not only automation, but primarily neo-liberalism (libertarian economics, free market fundamentalism, trickle-down, etc.), that is the cause. That allowed for outsourcing and lower wages, it removed anti-trust action. It removed social and economic support from the government. The USA declined on many measures, such as education, life-expectancy, happiness. Neo-liberalism is the reason. Unless it ends, America declines and dies. It's your choice.

American workers cannot survive unless neo-liberalism dies. Its ethic of "my taxes should not go to the lazy (X groups) who don't work" is no longer workable. People will need the reap the rewards of the machine owners, through government action and support, or the machine owners will have no customers.

Trump has chosen to embrace neo-liberalism on steroids. He gets an F.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
(12-28-2016, 05:30 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: If automation has collapsed jobs in the USA, it will collapse then in Europe and China too in time. If manufacturing is done by machines, fewer people are needed.

Yes, Eric, if Japan and South Korea and Germany have vastly higher levels of factory automation than the US, and yet higher rates of employment in the same sectors, then they must inevitably be behind the US and must collapse in their turn (as they catch up to US automation?).  Because, after all, if manufacturing employment in the US didn't collapse because of automation, it must have collapsed for some other reason, one which might be amenable to policy shifts, which means that something would have to be done (or at least an explanation tendered as to why those who set policy choose not to). And we can't have that, now, can we?

I mean, there is only so much work to be done, isn't there?
Reply
(12-28-2016, 02:48 PM)Mikebert Wrote: I am losing posts or something.  I clearly recall an exchange with Warren about his concept of deflationary stimulus that still makes no sense to me.  I made a post and never got a response. I can't find it now, so I wonder if it got lost and never appeared.  The idea was if you cut a plumbers tax rate he would be incented to cut his rates which would drum up more business expanding his output.

I think it was in another thread.  I have it in a browser tab and on my list to provide a serious answer to, as I have one other post.  Serious answers don't fit into the few seconds I typically have to write most of my posts, though.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Buy Passport,Driver License,Age & ID Card,(Whatsapp:.......: +1 (551) 239-2904) Visas huunnjh655 0 229 03-01-2024, 07:05 AM
Last Post: huunnjh655
  Registered passport ID card, driving license, visa, green card, residence permit, bir dominicadomi 0 196 02-21-2024, 11:40 PM
Last Post: dominicadomi
  Trump's real German analog Donald Trump takes office on Friday, and the world hol pbrower2a 2 3,077 02-09-2017, 05:52 PM
Last Post: freivolk

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 16 Guest(s)