Tuesday, November 13, 2018
Job or Task Displacement – We Don’t Know Nuffin’
For
anyone whose employment depends in whole or in part of some piece of relatively
sophisticated, memory-chip-driven equipment – from a computer to a digital
measuring device – you already have faced the driving forces of artificial
intelligence. Obviously, on the one hand, the more technologically complex the
work or, on the other, how repetitive the task, the more like that technology
has already redefined that job, particularly in the developed world. Think
that’s not you? Remember, todays’ average smart phone has more computing power
than the entire, fully-loaded Apollo 11 mission to the moon!
But
we are told that most of us will face losing jobs that are about to be rendered
obsolete by AI? What does that mean anyway? Many folks in the same job category
that existed fifty years ago clearly aren’t doing the what those workers did
half a century ago. Totally different, from manufacturing worker to attorney.
Is the addition of AI to our work mix just an upgrade? Yet, the numbers seem scary, as the November 5th
Los Angeles Times reminds us:
“A
recent study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said
that about 46% of jobs have a better-than-even chance of being automated. A 2016
study by Citigroup Inc. and the University of Oxford reported that 57% of jobs
were at high risk of automation, although a 2013 paper by two of the same
researchers predicted 47%. A recent PricewaterhouseCoopers report comes up with
somewhat lower numbers, though it varies by country.
“These
are large numbers. Even more troubling, they’re all fairly similar — each of
the studies seems to come to the conclusion that roughly half of all jobs are
very vulnerable to automation. But don’t panic — nobody really knows how many
jobs will be replaced by robots, or even what it means to be replaced.
“What
does it mean for a job to be lost to automation? Does it mean that a person is
rendered entirely obsolete as a worker, and is forced to go on the welfare
rolls? Or does it mean that she loses her current job, with her current
company? If a person gets a new job at a different company in the same industry
for more pay, does it still count as a job loss? What about for 85% as much
pay?
“The
studies are not clear about this. Usually, their basic methodology is to show
some technology experts a description of a job — or the tasks that, on paper, a
job is said to require — and then ask the experts whether they think technology
will soon be able to do those tasks. But even assuming that the experts are
correct — that there isn’t another AI winter or broad technological stagnation
— nobody really knows what happens to a job whose tasks can be automated.”
The
tariff-solution Trump administration is telling us that China and the rest of
the world have stolen our jobs… and we need to use those tariffs to get those
(mostly manufacturing) jobs back into the good old USA. No question that
“globalization” did just that: take those “repetitive step” blue collar work
(moving next to “repetitive step” white collar work) American jobs and moved
them to cheap-labor outsource mills overseas. It hurt a lot of people. They
don’t call the “Rust Belt” without reason.
We
did lose millions of jobs to international providers, and what’s worse, we
rather dramatically ignored those blue-collar masses whose 20th
century skills were insufficient to secure a comparable income in the 21st
century. Families with blue collar traditions, work done nobly from one
generation to the next… we simply shoved them out the economic door in this
country.
Democrats,
once the protectors of the working class, stepped up their “noble cause”
rhetoric but seemed put out, inconvenienced even, by whining blue-collars
workers from either displacement from obsolete jobs (assembly line
manufacturing, for example) or industries where their products were simply no
longer in demand (coal, for example).
The
GOP pricked up their ears and slid out of their “free trade” mantra and seized
on the anti-globalization banner embraced by Donald Trump. Smart move,
Republicans. They made promises that they couldn’t keep, but at least the GOP
was listening. They had someone to blame… conveniently Democrats (now labeled
“globalists). And even though the Dems are the ones who began a successful fix
in the post-recession economy that got screwed up on a Republican watch,
incumbents always take credit for anything good that happens when they are in
power and blame the opposition for all that ails us.
Those
grassroot, meat-and-potatoes money issues are the stuff that can elevate the
astute and decimate the oblivious. But even as globalization is not really the
job killer it once was, unemployed and underemployed blue-collar workers still think it is. Artificial intelligence has
leaked into the system so slowly – no overnight plant closings shipped
elsewhere – that it just isn’t as sexy a battleground. That reshoring
manufacturing jobs just make the owners of the automated equipment rich but
does not return the old blue-collar cadre to their high-paying jobs is
irrelevant. Spin those numbers.
But
the future will definitely redefine what humans do in the workplace versus what
automated machines take on. The need to upgrade skills and education will
become constant and routine. Changing jobs is now a defined pattern as it has
never been before. But will jobs go or tasks just be reassigned? “The infusion
of artificial intelligence, robotics and big data into the workplace is
elevating the demand for people’s ingenuity, to reinvent a process or rapidly
solve problems in an emergency.
“The
new blue-collar labor force will need four ‘distinctively more human’ core
competencies for advanced production: complex reasoning, social and emotional
intelligence, creativity and certain forms of sensory perception, said Jim
Wilson, a managing director at Accenture, a consulting firm.
“‘Work
in a certain sense, and globally in manufacturing, is becoming more human and
less robotic,’ says Wilson, who helped lead an Accenture study on emerging
technologies and employment needs covering 14,000 companies in 14 large,
industrialized nations.
“Few
narratives in economics and social policy are as alarmist as the penetration of
automation and artificial intelligence into the workplace, especially in
manufacturing… Economists talk about the hollowing-out of middle-income
employment. American political discourse is full of nostalgia for high-paying
blue-collar jobs. The Trump administration is imposing tariffs and rewriting
trade agreements to entice companies to keep plants in the U.S. or even bring
them back.
“The
stark reality is that automation will continue to erode repetitive work no
matter where people do it. But there is also a myth in this narrative that
suggests America has permanently lost its edge. The vacant mills in the
Southeast and Midwest, and the struggling cities around them, are evidence of
how technology and low-cost labor can rapidly kill off less-agile industries.
This isn’t necessarily a prologue to what’s next, however.
“Cutting-edge
manufacturing not only involves the extreme precision of a Rolls Royce turbofan
disc. It’s also moving toward mass customization and what Erica Fuchs calls ‘parts
consolidation’ — making more-complex blocks of components so a car, for
example, has far fewer parts. This new frontier often involves experimentation,
with engineers learning through frequent contact with production staff,
requiring workers to make new kinds of contributions.
“‘This
is a chance for the U.S. to lead. We have the knowledge and skills,’ says
Fuchs, an engineering and public-policy professor at Carnegie Mellon
University. ‘When you move manufacturing overseas, it can become unprofitable
to produce with the most advanced technologies.’” LA Times. Workers need new,
more challenging skills. Which brings me back to grassroots economics, but this
time the GOP is the party that just may have missed the boat.
The
notion of company-provided fringe benefits, particularly healthcare and
retirement, is becoming a new “meat-and-potatoes” issue as workers no longer
see lifetime employment as real, or where they are forced into a contractor
worker (gig economy) and must provide for themselves. And so the GOP is finding
their own Achilles Heel with their blue-collar base: Healthcare. No meaningful
effort to contain prescription drug costs. A nasty track record of voting down
fixes for the Affordable Care Act (a GOP Congress voting over 60 times to
repeal the whole thing) and championing higher costs or exclusions for
preexisting conditions (even in the 50-64 demographic of traditionally more
conservative voters). That has terrified a growing number in the GOP base. But
the future will change the workforce and the workplace. We may not have all the
answers, but we do need to implement what we do know and what workers now and
in the future are telling us they need. Congress, both sides of the aisle,
better start listening!
I’m Peter Dekom, and the only
constant we clearly face is change… accelerating like never before.
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