Thursday, October 4, 2018
Job Displacement Blues
Warehouse
robots at Amazon
While
artificial intelligence will displace as many white-collar jobs as it decimates
the remaining blue-collar workforce, the here and now of job displacement has
been felt primarily by the latter. The first big slam, now pretty much “over”
as the big issue – except in Trumpland where the President has declared trade
wars against the “evils of globalization” – is foreign cheap labor and
immigration taking away U.S. jobs. It was the story of the 1990s up to about
2010, when that “cheap labor” got paid a lot better – particularly in China –
and since, robotic automation has pretty much eclipsed “cheap labor” on an
accelerating basis.
There
is a smart robot, developed in part with DARPA money, that can manufacture a
line of denim blue jeans, many fits and sizes, for less than the cheapest
sweatshop in Bangladesh. While we are seeing sophisticated analytics, financial
planning, legal drafting and research and even some basic surgery replaced by
smart “machines,” so far the big hit in job displacement has slammed
blue-collar workers in ways far beyond the decimation that “globalization and
outsourcing” imposed in that 1990s-2010 era.
Driven
by the Great Recession, the emphasis for American private business was the
eradication of collective bargaining (only 6.7% of the private workforce is
unionized today) with concomitant wage suppression, the shift from labor
intensive to capital intensive resource extraction and manufacturing, all based
on automation driven by self-learning artificially intelligence robots and data
processing systems. As oil prices plunged, drill rig workers were rapidly
replaced by automatic equipment in droves. It was the only way the oil business
could continue. Layoffs were massive.
The
coal industry was already fading, as global demand for coal was no longer
expanding (dirty coal was no one’s first choice for energy anymore), and
despite Trump’s pledges to the contrary, even without life-giving clean air
regulations, coal mines continued to shut down for lack of demand.
Long
shoved out of the labor market, those blue-collar workers who were globalized
out of their jobs a decade and a half ago, their plight dramatically ignored by
the incumbent administrations of both parties, were still “excluded” when their
populist cry elected Donald Trump. That the globalization was no longer that
relevant fell on their deaf ears; that was why they were ousted “back then,”
and they simply assumed that was why there were very few blue-collar jobs left
that paid well. They just didn’t get that automation, not globalization, was
the bugaboo now.
That
blue-collar middle class is almost gone. There are a still few jobs at the top
of the blue-collar heap (longshoremen operating those big cranes make serious
six figure incomes), and while there is a shortage of truck drivers who can do
well, the time of driverless trucks is on the near-term horizon.
But
there are other jobs, less obvious and lower down the blue-collar economic
ladder that are beginning to fade and feeling the pain as well (as to available
work or relative pay scales). The September 17th Washington Post
provides these six examples: “[In the entertainment industry, online]
piracy laid waste to the music industry. We can blame it for the ‘lion’s share’
of the revenue lost during the era we examined, according to a 2017 Journal of
Economic Perspectives paper from University of Minnesota economist Joel
Waldfogel, author of ‘Digital Renaissance: What Data and Economics Tell Us
about the Future of Popular Culture.’
“But
there’s another, less apocalyptic reason the digital revolution has slashed
music and movie wages…. Digitization made music and movies far cheaper to
produce, distribute and promote, Waldfogel wrote. It broke the stranglehold of
movie studios and music labels, which were once the only institutions that
could afford the $1-million cost of bringing an album to market in 2010 or the
$106 million it cost to produce a major film in 2007. As a result, he said, ‘the
number of new movies and sound recordings has skyrocketed in the past few
years.’ Most of those new products are coming from independent labels and
smaller studios.
“At
the same time, employment in the music and motion-picture industries has
expanded. The new jobs pay less than when gatekeepers ruled the earth, but
Waldfogel found that as a whole, the industry is producing an ever-increasing
number of well-reviewed movies and albums.
“The
major labels and studios took a hit, Waldfogel wrote, but because ‘consumers
are now awash in products that they find desirable,’ it appears that ‘digitization
has ushered in a golden age of music, movies, books, and television
programming.’
“[When
it comes to repair work], of all repair workers, those who fix, install
and maintain refrigerators, chain saws, televisions and assorted household
goods have seen their wages fall the quickest… The internet is a likely
culprit, but the disruption is different from how technology transformed the
music and warehouse industries. The Wall Street Journal reported in 2015 that
repair workers were being squeezed by frugal customers and the rise of a
YouTube-enabled ‘do-it-yourself’ repair ethic. The trend appears to be
continuing: Home Depot’s latest earnings hit an all-time high.
“A
growing number of customers are watching how-to repair videos and ordering
parts online. If they can’t fix it themselves, they’re more likely to buy one
of today’s relatively cheap new appliances rather than call the repair shop.
Appliance prices have fallen 21% since 1992, even as consumer prices have risen
62.3% overall, Commerce Department figures show.
“‘[As
for the auto industry], long a bedrock of middle-class U.S. jobs, has
been hit by two distinct forces: foreign competition and the internet, which
dragged down pay across the industry… Companies such as Advance Auto Parts have
struggled to keep up with the low prices and convenience of online retailers
such as Amazon.com. Advance’s stock peaked in 2015 and has not topped that
since as investors worry that brick-and-mortar stores are in long-term decline.
Prices for car parts have fallen since the end of 2014, government data show.
“‘I’ve
been working at AutoZone for eight years, and I still make just $30,000 a year,’
said Jason Clawson, a 34-year-old from Ohio who recently completed weekend
classes to become a truck driver, a job he thinks will double his pay… Used-car
prices are at a 13-year high, Edmunds.com says, and sales remain strong, but
shoppers who used to go to a car lot are increasingly buying online or at an
auction, hurting the commissions used-car dealers once enjoyed.
“[Warehouse
jobs are growing number but dropping in pay.] Employment at warehouses has
soared, rising from 515,000 in 2000 to 1,032,000 today. Warehouses have become
crucial links in the online retail and global supply chains that ship parts
from all over the globe to offices and homes. Yet annual pay for warehouse
workers (excluding managers) has fallen from a peak of about $42,500 in 2000 to
about $38,000 now, adjusted for inflation.
“[Diane]
Swonk, the Grant Thornton economist, says it’s the result of a highly paid
industrial sector transforming into a business dominated by lower-paying retail
firms. The large decline in union jobs and rise of temporary workers have also
lowered pay. Companies see workers as easy to replace, she says, so there is
little reason to raise pay to keep them…
“[Food
manufacturing is taking a hit too.] Food manufacturing is a different
industry than it was 20 years ago. There’s a lot more meat involved. And
because slaughterhouses tend to pay less than other food work, overall pay has
fallen… Jobs in cheese factories and in fruit-and-vegetable canneries or
packing plants still pay relatively well. But there are fewer of them.
Lower-paying jobs in slaughterhouses, meatpacking plants and, to a lesser
extent, bakeries have taken their place.
“Author
Lynn Waltz wrote in the newsletter PostEverything this year that slaughterhouse
pay has fallen as major manufacturers have moved jobs from urban union
strongholds to cheaper rural areas in less union-friendly states. Exploitation
of workers in the U.S. illegally has also kept wages down, Waltz said…
“[For
lumber-related jobs, the] rise and fall of sawyers and other
wood-product factory workers tracks closely to the U.S. housing bubble and
subsequent mortgage crisis…. Lumber mills bled jobs and slashed paychecks as
the housing market collapsed. Wages are now beginning to recover, but there are
far fewer woodworkers around to earn them… U.S. lumber-related industries have
been hammered by the cheap Chinese imports that flooded into the United States
from 1990 to 2007. Wood products and furniture were at the epicenter of the
shock, suffering more than almost any other industries, according to MIT
economist David Autor and his collaborators.”
America
cannot ignore the plight of workers whose time has passed. Trump has
exacerbated the problem by putting the blame on globalization and immigration,
where it used to be, and not on automation, where it is now. You can almost
layer a map of maximum oxycontin and fentanyl abuse on vast pockets of unemployed
rust belt and resource extraction regions and see a match. Trump and his
populist pledges cannot deliver what is long gone and not coming back. His
trade wars might create a few, very few, old jobs, but the cost to jobs for the
rest of us could become catastrophic.
Economic
support. Retraining. Rethinking. New jobs created by the government itself or
incented with a government push in healthcare, infrastructure, research,
environmental technology and education are needed right now. Not tax cuts for the
rich with virtually no benefits for the rest of us. Jobs to rebuild and grow
America and reengage those otherwise left behind.
I’m Peter Dekom,
and that doesn’t mean that in the meantime the rest of the nation shouldn’t
care, because if we do not take care of our own… and soon… we will all enjoy
the great unraveling of the United States as a viable nation… together.
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