http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/riseoftherobots.htm
‘Will a robot take your
job? We have entered a period in human history when technology is
advancing at an exponential rate. In some ways, this has been a great
blessing for humanity. For example, I am absolutely blown away by all of
the things that my little iPod can do. But on the other hand, all of this
technology is eliminating millions upon millions of high paying jobs. In
the past, I have written extensively about how millions of American jobs have been
sent to the other side of the world, but now we may be moving into a time when
workers all over the planet will be steadily losing jobs to super-efficient
robots. For employers, robots provide a lot of advantages to human
workers. Robots never complain, they never get tired, they never need
vacation, they never show up late, they never waste time of Facebook, they
don't need any health benefits and there are a whole lot of rules, regulations
and taxes that you must deal with when you hire a human worker. In the
past, robots were exceedingly expensive, and that limited their usefulness in
the workplace, but as you will see later in this article that is rapidly
changing. As robots continue to become even more advanced and even less
expensive, will there eventually come a point where the "human
worker" is virtually obsolete?
Of course I can hear the
objections already. Many of you will insist that even though automation
has always eliminated jobs in the past, it has also always created new jobs
that were even better. For instance, once upon a time most of the U.S.
population worked on farms, but thanks to automation now hardly any of us do.
But what happens when we get to
the point where super-intelligent robots are more efficient at everything?
What will be left for
"human workers" to do?
And if human workers are no
longer needed for most tasks, what will their role in society be?
Personally, I still complain
about self-service check-in kiosks at airports and self-checkout lanes at
supermarkets, but most people seem to have accepted them. There are even
many bank branches now that don't have any humans in them at all. The
number of jobs where a human worker is absolutely "required" is
dwindling all the time.
And a lot of the jobs that are
disappearing thanks to advances in technology are fairly high paying
jobs. In fact, one recent study of
employment data from 20 countries discovered that "almost all the jobs
disappearing are in industries that pay middle-class wages, ranging from
$38,000 to $68,000."
As I mentioned earlier, in the
past robots were simply far too expensive to perform most tasks. So human
workers had an advantage.
But that advantage is
disappearing right in front of our eyes. For example, one company has
produced a new robot called "Baxter" that only costs $22,000.
The following is from an article about Baxter in the MIT Technology Review...
Baxter
was conceived by Rodney Brooks, the Australian roboticist and
artificial-intelligence expert who left MIT to build a $22,000 humanoid robot
that can easily be programmed to do simple jobs that have never been automated
before.
Eventually,
the goal is to produce versions of Baxter that will perform tasks even more
cheaply than Chinese workers do...
Brooks’s
company, Rethink Robotics, says the robot will spark a “renaissance” in
American manufacturing by helping small companies compete against low-wage
offshore labor. Baxter will do that by accelerating a trend of factory
efficiency that’s eliminated more jobs in the U.S. than overseas competition
has. Of the approximately 5.8 million manufacturing jobs the U.S. lost between
2000 and 2010, according to McKinsey Global Institute, two-thirds were lost
because of higher productivity and only 20 percent moved to places like China,
Mexico, or Thailand.
The
ultimate goal is for robots like Baxter to take over more complex tasks, such
as fitting together parts on an electronics assembly line. “A couple more ticks
of Moore’s Law and you’ve got automation that works more cheaply than Chinese
labor does,” Andrew McAfee, an MIT researcher, predicted last year at a
conference in Tucson, Arizona, where Baxter was discussed.
So
it won't just be American workers that will be displaced by robots - it will
literally be workers all over the planet.
In
the future, when you call someone for customer service you probably won't be
talking to someone in India. Instead, you will probably be talking to a robot. In
fact, this transition is already starting to happen...
IPsoft
is a young company started by Chetan Dube, a former mathematics professor at
New York University. He reckons that artificial intelligence can take over most
of the routine information-technology and business-process tasks currently
performed by workers in offshore locations. “The last decade was about
replacing labour with cheaper labour,” says Mr Dube. “The coming decade will be
about replacing cheaper labour with autonomics.”
IPsoft’s
Eliza, a “virtual service-desk employee” that learns on the job and can reply
to e-mail, answer phone calls and hold conversations, is being tested by
several multinationals. At one American media giant she is answering 62,000
calls a month from the firm’s information-technology staff. She is able to
solve two out of three of the problems without human help. At IPsoft’s
media-industry customer Eliza has replaced India’s Tata Consulting Services.
Even
some of the largest companies in China are starting to make the transition from
human workers to robots. The following is from a recent TechCrunch article...
Foxconn
has been
planning to buy 1 million robots to replace human workers and it looks like
that change, albeit gradual, is about to start.
The
company is allegedly paying $25,000 per robot – about three times a worker’s
average salary – and they will replace humans in assembly tasks. The plans have
been in place for a while – I spoke to Foxconn reps about this a year ago
– and it makes perfect sense. Humans are messy, they want more money, and
having a half-a-million of them in one factory is a recipe for unrest. But what
happens after the halls are clear of careful young men and women and instead
full of whirring robots?
So
what will the world look like as robots begin to replace humans in just about
every industry that you can imagine?
A
recent Wired article described what this
transition might look like...
First,
machines will consolidate their gains in already-automated industries. After
robots finish replacing assembly line workers, they will replace the workers in
warehouses. Speedy bots able to lift 150 pounds all day long will retrieve
boxes, sort them, and load them onto trucks. Fruit and vegetable picking will
continue to be robotized until no humans pick outside of specialty farms.
Pharmacies will feature a single pill-dispensing robot in the back while the
pharmacists focus on patient consulting. Next, the more dexterous chores of
cleaning in offices and schools will be taken over by late-night robots, starting
with easy-to-do floors and windows and eventually getting to toilets. The
highway legs of long-haul trucking routes will be driven by robots embedded in
truck cabs.
All
the while, robots will continue their migration into white-collar work. We
already have artificial intelligence in many of our machines; we just don’t
call it that. Witness one piece of software by Narrative Science (profiled in
issue 20.05) that can write newspaper stories about sports games directly from
the games’ stats or generate a synopsis of a company’s stock performance each
day from bits of text around the web. Any job dealing with reams of paperwork
will be taken over by bots, including much of medicine. Even those areas of
medicine not defined by paperwork, such as surgery, are becoming increasingly
robotic. The rote tasks of any information-intensive job can be automated. It
doesn’t matter if you are a doctor, lawyer, architect, reporter, or even
programmer: The robot takeover will be epic.
I
don't know about you, but the phrase "robot takeover" is not exactly
comforting.
Perhaps
I just watch too many movies.
In
any event, as technology advances there will eventually be very few jobs that
robots cannot perform. In fact, you might be surprised to learn some of
the things that robots are already doing. The following is from a recent Yahoo News article...
Google
and Toyota are rolling out cars that can drive themselves. The Pentagon deploys
robots to find roadside explosives in Afghanistan and wages war from the air
with drone aircraft. North Carolina State University this month introduced a
high-tech library where robots — "bookBots" — retrieve books when
students request them, instead of humans. The library's 1.5 million books are
no longer displayed on shelves; they're kept in 18,000 metal bins that require
one-ninth the space.
So
what will the 3.1 million Americans that
drive trucks do for a living once robots are driving all of our trucks?
What
will the 573,000 Americans that drive buses do for a living once robots are
driving all of our buses?
And
eventually even our skies may be filled with robotic drones that are busy
performing one task or another. Just check out what a recent Time Magazine article had to
say about the emerging drone industry...
But
the drone industry is ramping up for a big landgrab the moment the regulatory
environment starts to relax. At last year's Association for Unmanned Vehicle
Systems International (AUVSI) trade show in Las Vegas, more than 500 companies
pitched drones for filming crowds and tornados and surveying agricultural
fields, power lines, coalfields, construction sites, gas spills and
archaeological digs. A Palo Alto, Calif., start-up called Matternet wants to
establish a network of drones that will transport small, urgent packages, like
those for medicine.
In other
countries civilian drone populations are already booming. Aerial video is a
major application. A U.K. company called Skypower makes the eight-rotored
Cinipro drone, which can carry a cinema-quality movie camera. In Costa Rica
they're used to study volcanoes. In Japan drones dust crops and track schools
of tuna; emergency workers used one to survey the damage at Fukushima. A nature
preserve in Kenya ran a crowdsourced fundraising drive to buy drones to watch
over the last few northern white rhinos. Ironically, while the U.S. has been
the leader in sending drones overseas, it's lagging behind when it comes to
deploying them on its own turf.
Unfortunately,
many people will not understand what I am really trying to get at in this
article.
They
will just say something like this: "Well, they are going to need someone
to build all of those robots."
Even
if that is true, they won't need hundreds of millions of us to build them.
No,
the truth is that when human workers become "obsolete", those that dominate society with
technology will look at the rest of us as "useless eaters" that are
not contributing anything to society at all.
Already,
there are many economists that are warning that advancements in technology are
steadily reducing "the natural employment rate".
And
we are already seeing this happen in the United States. As I wrote about the other day, the percentage of the labor force that
is employed has declined every single year since 2006...
2006:
63.1
2007:
63.0
2008:
62.2
2009:
59.3
2010:
58.5
2011:
58.4
In
January, only 57.9 percent of the civilian labor
force was employed.
Of
course there are certainly a lot of factors involved in why those numbers are
declining, but without a doubt technology is playing a role.
So
what do we do with all of the workers that are being displaced?
Are
we just going to put everybody on food stamps?
Will
the gap between the rich and the poor
grow even larger than it is today?
Will
most people eventually become dependent on the government in order to
survive?
We
are moving into uncharted territory, and nobody is quite sure what comes next.
As
time goes by, robots will even start to look more like us. In fact, this
is already starting to happen. Just check out the following description
of a "bionic man" that has been created from a recent article in the Guardian...
He
cuts a dashing figure, this gentleman: nearly seven feet tall, and possessed of
a pair of striking brown eyes. With a fondness for Ralph Lauren, middle-class
rap and sharing a drink with friends, Rex is, in many ways, an unexceptional
chap.
Except
that he is, in fact, a real-world bionic man. Housed within a frame of
state-of-the-art prosthetic limbs is a functional heart-lung system, complete
with artificial blood pumping through a network of pulsating modified-polymer
arteries. He has a bionic spleen to clean the blood, and an artificial pancreas
to keep his blood sugar on the level. Behind the deep brown irises are a pair
of retinal implants, giving him a vista of the crowds of curious humans who
meet his gaze.
He
even has a degree of artificial intelligence: talk to him, and he'll listen
(through his cochlear implants), before using a speech generator to respond.
As
robots become more like us, will we eventually become more like them?
Will
we be told that we must "merge with the machines" in order to keep up
and be useful in society?
As
we rapidly approach the "technological singularity" that
futurist Ray Kurzweil and others have talked about, will humans increasingly
seek to "enhance" themselves with technology in an attempt to
"get an edge"?
What
will happen to those of us that refuse to "merge with the machines"
and that refuse to "enhance ourselves" with technology?
Will
we be outcasts?
Those
are some important questions. Feel free to share your thoughts on those
questions by posting a comment below...’