Friday, November 10, 2017
Understanding Automation
The United States was clearly
slammed by global competition, particularly in the 1990s and for twenty years
thereafter. Clothing, appliances, furniture, televisions, cars, and many other
durable manufactures could be made overseas for a significant reduction in
price. Overseas labor in third world and developing nations often worked long
hours under horrible conditions, even when corrected by higher shipping costs
and even some tariffs, undercutting American blue collar workers left, right
and center. Too many American workers were displaced, never to earn much again.
Nobody seemed to care about them.
American companies could not
compete with these foreign manufactured goods, so they joined in and move their
operations overseas. Marginally-skilled American workers lost their jobs in
droves, and there were few economic support systems to replace their lost
earning power. Too old or unwilling to go back to school to learn a new trade,
many of these workers permanently dropped out of the American workforce, no
longer included in the unemployment statistics because they gave up what they
believed to be a hopeless job search.
These people still lingered, hoping
for magic… and their hero appeared. Donald Trump was the master of blame:
globalization was evil, high taxes and regulations prevented money trickling
down to increase hires. He would pull out of “the worst trade agreements ever
negotiated,” would cut “job-killing regulations and taxes,” and “Make America
Great Again.” He would create “jobs, jobs, jobs.” Just one tiny catch:
globalization had settled into the new normal. Jobs were no longer being lost
to cheap overseas labor (Chinese labor isn’t even cheap anymore). 87% of recent
US manufacturing job-loss surrendered to automation, not globalization.
Yet as Donald Trump’s November 10th
speech before APEC members in Da Nang, Vietnam suggests, globalization, not
automation, is the main source of American job loss… a message that is most
certainly “yesterday’s news.” On the other hand, Chinese leader Xi Jinping,
addressing the same body, touted the irreversibility of global trade.
As I wrote in my September 11th
Stitches blog, blaming global trade for
today’s employment issues is yesterday’s news. The promise of “reshoring”
(bringing manufacturing back to the U.S.) under the notion of U.S. job creation
is beyond empty these days. No business with an ounce of economic understanding
is going to take cheap-labor overseas manufacturing and bring it back into the
United States with the same extent of vastly more expensive labor. And with
Congress pretty much telling Mr. Trump that they are not open to punitive
duties on American companies who manufacture abroad, the only kinds of
manufacturing returning to the United States is driven by the elimination
and substitution of labor by automated machinery. And more and more,
that automation includes the ability to “learn” and improve the process without
human intervention. Artificial Intelligence (AI).
In other words, income inequality
fans, the folks who benefit most from reshoring are those who own those
sophisticated and automated manufacturing systems – wealthy owners of companies
and their financial support communities – and those who lose the most are the displaced
workers. Sure reshoring creates a few jobs, a couple of supervisors, monitors
and maintenance workers (and even those jobs are getting reduced as artificial
intelligence grows), but the number of people required in the manufacturing
process is dropping like a stone.
Stitches describes an automated
clothing-making machine that can produce a sophisticated finished article of
clothing for a per-unit cost much cheaper than the least expensive assembly
line in Bangladesh. They’re called “SewBots,” and they are built and programmed
by an Atlanta, Georgia, SoftWear Automation. It took ten years to develop,
primarily through Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development
Center(with a Department of Defense DARPA innovation grant), but the system is stunning
in what it can do… and for the longer-term impact on the global notion of labor
itself. The folks who own those SewBots will make the money, but the workers
who used to make that clothing will not. A parallel question could easily be,
what happens truck drivers when we have self-driving trucks?
To understand how fast automation
is replacing workers, take a really good look at the oil and gas drilling
industry as reflected in the above chart. Even as we are building more drilling
rigs, which you would think would generate lots of new jobs, the number of oil
and gas workers has plunged. The motivation for bringing so much automation
onto drilling rigs came when the price of oil fell precipitously and stayed
there. Forced to reduce the cost of fossil fuel extraction, the industry
embraced massive job-killing automation to replace expensive labor.
“Thanks to automated drilling, a
once dangerous and very laborious task now requires fewer people to accomplish.
Automation of oil rigs means that one rig can do more with fewer workers. In
fact, it’s expected that what once took a crew of 20 will soon take a crew of 5.
The application of new technologies to oil drilling means that of the 440,000
jobs lost in the global downturn, as many as 220,000 of those jobs may never
come back.
“Now look back at the chart again,
and notice how quickly this all happened. It took TWO YEARS. How did it
happen so fast? Because the oil industry didn’t really need the workers it lost
in the first place. It’s the oil industry. It’s used to making lots of money,
and when you’re making money hand over fist, you don’t need to focus on
efficiency. Being lean and mean is not your concern. However, that changes when
times get tough, and times got very tough for the oil industry as oil prices
plummeted thanks to new competition from yet another technological
advancement — fracking.
“So once it became important to
increase efficiency, that’s exactly what the oil industry did. It let people go
and it invested in automation. In the summer of 2016, oil prices were no longer
under $30 per barrel, and had gone back up to around $50 per barrel where they
remain. That’s half of the $100 per barrel they’d gotten used to, which is fine
as long as they’re able to produce at twice the efficiency. As a result, like a
phoenix rising, they emerged transformed. Oil rigs returned to drilling, but
all the rig workers didn’t. Those who were let go became simply unnecessary
overhead.
“Companies are actively investing
in automation because it means they can produce more at a lower cost. That’s
good for business. Wages, salaries, and benefits are all just overhead that
can be eliminated by use of machines.
“But hey, don’t worry, right?
Because everyone unemployed by machines will find better jobs elsewhere that
pay even more… Well, about that, that’s not at all what the history of
automation in the computer age over the past 40 years shows. Yes, some with highly
valued skills go on to get better jobs, but they are very much the minority. Most people end up finding new paid work that requires less
skill, and thus pays less. The job market is steadily polarizing…
“[Technology] is only getting
cheaper, so each successive drop squeezes out more human labor, and is able to
automate more lower-skill labor that is newly more expensive than machines.
Expect the next recession to put over ten million of people out of work, and
for the economy to realize they didn’t really need those people as workers
after all to produce what was being produced. Where 79% of eligible workers aged
25–54 were employed, expect that to fall to 69% or below. The economy simply
doesn’t need the number of people it currently employs with the technology we
already have available. To add insult to injury, it’s taking longer for the unemployed to find employment,
so those suffering next will suffer longer.” Scott Santens writing for the
October 24th Medium.com.
So we
now come back to the basic conundrum. Globalization ain’t it. Companies,
including some that base their operations on educated workers with white collar
skills, cannot compete unless they reduce expensive labor and replace them
with machines. As artificial intelligence grows, the level of work that can
be delegated to machines rises exponentially… the unemployment reaches higher
and higher up the labor economic ladder, eventually replacing even surgeons,
lawyers and financial advisors. But as the employment picture declines, as
earning power for the labor force declines, as wealth continues to concentrate
in the hands of those at the top of the food chain who own the machines at the
expense of human workers, where are the consumers to buy those cheaper
products? See a problem for everyone here?
What do
you do with a highly-educated work force than cannot get a job or can’t earn
enough to have sufficient discretionary income to make a difference? Do we tax
the machines and spread the wealth to displaced workers under a notion of
“universal basic income”? How do we decide who gets what? That’s socialism on
steroids. It may be inevitable, but there isn’t a major developed nation with a
social-political-economic system that is remotely prepared for this onslaught
of “automation replacing humans” at the scale that is well underway.
I’m Peter Dekom, and as politicians
– particularly Donald J Trump – focus on an issue with decreasing relevance
(globalization) for American workers, nobody is minding the back door as
automation will decimate and reconfigure our entire job market.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment