http://www.boingboing.net/images/_~hpm_talks_revo.slides_power.aug.curve_power.aug.jpg
In case you haven't heard, the software giant Google has debuted a new fully automated, driver-less car. Not only are the prototypes fully functional, they have also already logged a combined 140,000 miles of unassisted driving on U.S. roads. Google itself estimates that the system may be ready for full-scale production in eight years, before the decade is even out.
An eight-year period may seem overly optimistic, but it actually makes a lot of sense in context of computer systems. An observed phenomenon known as 'Moore's Law' states that the processing power of a standard desktop computer roughly doubles every two years, for the same cost. If Moore's law remains constant, then by 2020, the standard desktop should have the processing power of somewhere between the mind of a monkey and of a human - in other words, more than enough power to navigate traffic with the right software.
What does this mean for the economy? On the one hand, it will mean more efficient roads, lower costs of transportation, and cheaper costs of goods. On the other hand, there are an estimated 3.5 million truck drivers currently employed in the U.S., and this field is one of few which offers prospects of a middle-class income without a college degree. On top of this, consider the hundreds of thousands of bus, taxi and limousine drivers - and that similar technology will likely be simultaneously be rolled out for shipping, rail, forklift, crane operations, etc (indeed, to small degrees it already has).
You might remember how a few years ago, a GPS unit or a smart-phone were extravagant luxuries, but now are so common as to be unremarkable. There is no reason to believe that driver-less car technology will not be adopted with similar speed. Unlike smart phones, however, automated driving will cause massive and simultaneous layoffs.
If this were only happening in the transportation sector, I would not argue that it constitutes a paradigm shift in economics. This trend is however driven by computing speed, which is applicable to the great majority of fields and sectors. In other words, job destruction is and will be happening more rapidly than job creation in the majority of economic fields. The Google Car is a case in point - reportedly, only 15 engineers are responsible for the creation of its working prototypes, while it may someday soon make 15 million or more jobs obsolete around the world.
In the twentieth century, increased production by capitalists required increased labor forces, and increased payrolls, which created an automatic feed-back loop where more production led to more economic demand, and so on. Computer technology, and to a lesser degree other advances, are breaking this feedback loop.
This is presenting us with an entirely new economic paradigm, where production of goods is only loosely linked to human labor, and it is presenting us with two divergent paths as a species.
The first path is where 20th century economic paradigms remain in place long after their practical obsolescence, and consumption of goods remains rigidly connected to production or ownership. In this world, there are fewer and fewer decent jobs available except to a technocratic elite, and corporate cyborg-like entities compete with one another to enrich a shrinking ownership class to the exclusion of the growing underclass. If you look, you can see evidence of this taking place all around you.
In the second path, productivity gains are partially socialized while markets remain free - in other words, a portion of the increased productivity made possible by the new technologies is redistributed into a guaranteed national income, or welfare which is available to all, permanently, regardless of ability or even desire to find employment. In this world, work becomes wholly a choice, as subsistence is possible and even guaranteed regardless, but markets remain free and wealth accumulation is otherwise uninhibited, except through nominal (and possibly decreasing) tax rates. A musician for example could choose to charge at his concerts and become wealthier (or afford better equipment), or play for free and subsist happily on his guaranteed income. A capitalist could accumulate major holdings of industry, become world famous, accumulate toys and properties, be a player in the advancements in the latest fields, and he could also rest assured knowing that even if all his investments go bankrupt tomorrow, he can still live a full and comfortable life without the charity of others.
In any case, it is doubtful that millions of truck drivers unemployed en masse will take it lying down, or be content with a few months of unemployment checks and little prospects beyond that. Which direction society takes is likely to depend heavily on politics. Democratic nations (in the sense of nations which implement the desires of the majority as polivy, as distinguished from nations with mere formalities like elections) will tend toward the second path, while nations where money decides policy will tend towards the first, and the morass of third-worldism.
In neither case will there be top down, Soviet style control of the economy - in both cases markets will be free, on the one hand free to command humans, and on the other hand free to serve humanity. But one thing which is clear is that 20th Century paradigms will not work for understanding 21st Century economic crises, and these crises will not be resolved until the economically-minded stop looking towards long-dead theorists of long dead economic systems, and start looking at the object in front of their face they are typing into.
Just for the record:
So employment has been increasing and real compensation has been increasing despite radical technological change. So much for ravomoron's "explanation of the facts."
Political Atheists Blog
Working conditions have improved because of regulations, overtime pay, the minimum wage and education subsidies
No, see...because feudal times have to do with what era people live in, not how the economy functions. And again, economies ARE. It isn't a case of "Oh, look! We've invented the axle! We have to rewrite all the fundamentals of economics because they no longer apply! WE ARE LIVING IN A BRAVE NEW WORLD!"
Plus...I don't even get what your picture is saying. I'm gonna go ahead and interpret it as "If we couldn't buy and sell things and purchase the things we work for, we would be dead!"
Best sarcasm I've read all day.
Sorry from bringing up real world evidence and and then finding theories that explain it and make further predictions, I forgot that praxeology does the reverse...
There's a word for theories that can't be falsified by evidence - "superstition."
(Okay, so let's analyze this. Praxeology--which is the study of human action and conduct, as defined by Merriam-Webster--is the reverse of those things? So a praxeological study does NOT bring up real-world evidence, such as "he bought it, therefore he must have wanted it"? And praxeology produces no theories, such as "human beings act with purpose"? And that theory can't be used to make further predictions, such as "a person will take action X, because it satisfies want A"? Okay. I'm sold. Hey, do you know why you can't falsify praxeological statements? Because you can't read people's minds and know their motivations. You have to ask them, and even then you can't tell if they're lying. So you...get this...STUDY...the outcomes of their behavior and assume a motivational factor. Can you conceive of any action taken that does not have purpose? This isn't like trying to falsify the existence of a god, you know. We're talking about falsifying something that we actually CAN'T conceive of an alternative to. Even deciding to take no action is a purposive action. I could deny your existence, and you could come knocking on my door, and I could then claim that you aren't the non-existing entity writing poorly-rationalized quips on a forum, and how will you falsify this? No matter what you do, I can deny it. By your logic, you are superstition.)
"Praxeological statements cannot be subjected to any empirical assessment whether it is falsificationist or verificationist."
- Murray Rothbard
(See above.)
“Faith must trample under foot all reason, sense, and understanding.”
Tell you what. Let's just do this for the rest of the year. You say something ridiculous, and this time I'LL type "graph" into Google Images, click randomly, and say that the graph says I'm right.
You know, I wonder if there's a graph that shows a percentage of Austrians who were right about the recession versus Everyone Else...
This looks like a new super cheap cap to me. It has the potential to increase acceptance of car-sharing and public transport while decreasing car jams. I am curious to see by how much such an invention can increase the fuel efficiency of the overall transport system
the first post assumes that computers will even be able to match human intelligence; Moore's law, in practice, is intereting, but it's also finite; come 2015-2017, we're going to run itno some serious issues, mainly beause of quantum tunneling. This can be worked around by using exotic materials and super-cooling, but it's still quickly approaching the point where processors will have to go three-dimensional or we'll have to focus more on software than hardware (which, well, would be nice, I admit). In either event, we're just now beginning to understand and theorize about some functionings of the brain, while the "mind" is still an almost total mystery.
Call me a dualist, maniac, denier or what have you, but I don't think computers will ever approach a level of intelligence even remotely similar to humans--automation may increase one-thousand fold in the next 10 years, but the human mind, IMHO at least, will still be unrivaled and untouched--there will always be something new for us to think of, research, invent, or work towards to improve our own working conditions.
All this new fangled device will do is make transportation safer, cheaper, faster, more efficient, and products cheaper as well (imagine not having to pay that UPS guy is bloated $100K union salary! the price of shipping would fall through the floor); not only that, but someone will have to help make the devices, program it, install it, test it, provide tech support for when it's not functioning well, etc; it'll just be different jobs in different sectors; meanwhile, everyone will enjoy a much higher standard of living with this device.
Bring about the automation revolution; it's long overdue.
Resident Christian Anarcho-Capitalist.
In a computer hardware and software are seperated. This is not the case for the brain where neurons can grow or retreat according to their usage. So Fox is right, it is not a wise idea to equate computational power with human intelligence.
it's also not ready anytime soon, nor is the initial design meant to replace drivers so much as aid them:
http://gizmodo.com/5662005/test-driving-googles-driverless-car
granted, all of that will change, in time, and once the device is out as a safety feature, eventually it'll be advanced enough to be a "driverless feature", but for now? Nope.