I've recently been watching those "how they're made" shows on the Science channel, and it's truly amazing to me the complex machinery and processes they use to mass produce many of those items, with such little human interaction. 100 years ago, it would have taken hundreds or thousands of people to do what those machines do, and maybe a dozen human operators.So, as we advance technologically, and machines start to take over more and more industries (if AI ever comes, it could really put a lot of people out of jobs), where are people suppose to work? At a perfect level of technological saturation of job fields (hundreds of years, at least, away), it would leave a lot of unskilled, and some skilled, laborers out of work. The current model of capitalism pushed by many conservatives suggest that these people get a job, any job, but it's possible that there would be no jobs, or at least no jobs that pay anywhere near well enough. If we left it up to corporations, they wouldn't care about people, as long as they were making their product as efficiently as possible (with the robots), and selling them for good profits. Either the gov. would truly have to engage in a communist-level of redistribution, people will starve to death (thinning the population), or there is some variable I am missing (which is where you all come in).Further, tech. clearly has reduced the market for unskilled labor, and it seems in the FDR era, the industrial/economic systems were restructured to accommodate for this (permanent, progressive taxes). Will the progressive tax continue to progress with technology?
10/9/2005 6:19:43 PM
The more people who go out of a job, the less demand there is for those products. This doesn't contradict anything you said, but wasn't quite expressed. The thinning of the population part, in particular, works with that. The industral machine makes a few people very rich at the same time as putting people out of work. So if the elite class could somehow be big enough consumers themselves to fill in the void of billions of ordinary people... well i don't know.
10/9/2005 6:27:16 PM
The loss of jobs is temporary.The creation of wealth is perminent.
10/9/2005 6:37:35 PM
moron, and human history up until this point just doesn't sway you? We have 300 years of history to demonstrate that job destruction breeds job creation. A worker's salary is determined by his productivity, quantity of jobs is determined by the quantity of job seekers. If there are more people than jobs then wages will fall which will produce more jobs (employers will reduce capital intensity to increase profits by employing more workers at the new lower wages). Therefore: wages, employment, and productivity all play off each other. A sudden influx of workers will reduce wages, inducing a reduction in productivity, thus restoring employment equalibrium. As such, the US unemployment rate currently sits at 5.1%, this is an historically low value. If future technological advancement is going to increase unemployment then why has not past technological advancement done so?
10/9/2005 6:46:19 PM
^^^ The most amazing process I have seen so far is how the manufacture pantyhose. That's a simple textile product that many people will buy, regardless. If you look at something like clothing, people would need that whether they have a job or not. I can see what you are saying about the demand, but that would mostly apply to luxury items, that only a small percentage of people buy anyway.[Edited on October 9, 2005 at 6:49 PM. Reason : j]
10/9/2005 6:49:26 PM
^^ I'm not really arguing employment, as much as quality of wages.You are correct that there isn't massive unemployment, but recently, the gulf between the rich and poor has been growing (IIRC, it was massive before the great depression, dropped in the decades afterwards, then has started growing again).But, history doesn't necessarily go against what i'm saying, I don't think. The industrial revolution did cause significant shifts in society, from where people lived, to how we eat. Society is getting pretty "stuffed" as it is, and as the population grows, and more places become urbanized, it makes us (society) less versatile, to handle significant changes.Also, what you are describing is a perfect capitalist system, and your system also necessitates class gradations (it requires there to be some suffering, helpless, needy people). We create technology to ultimately make our lives easier and more luxurious, and it works well (washing machines, microwaves, dishwashers, cars, etc). It seems that promoting a system that is almost defeating of this goal, and that promotes the misery of a significant group of people is somewhat barbaric. Communism is too extreme (the pitfalls of which are well known), but it seems that capitalism is also extreme as well. I think considering the changes technology will cause, it makes more sense to actively pursue a form of capitalism that is more flexible, that can ultimately result in the success of most of the people, that doesn't require a class of people to be suffering (something more socialist).
10/9/2005 7:02:38 PM
alot of sociologists think so, but that really doesnt say that much. they oversimplify the process, just as economists simplify societie's issues into strictly issues of the market and the consumer.
10/9/2005 7:25:51 PM
we could always get jobs cleaning the robots that clean the robots.
10/9/2005 7:39:13 PM
^lol, someone must have been there to see me argue with Marshall Brain 2 years ago
10/9/2005 7:51:42 PM
10/9/2005 8:17:49 PM
10/9/2005 8:30:09 PM
10/9/2005 8:50:58 PM
10/9/2005 9:18:36 PM
10/10/2005 12:32:31 PM
The bottom line: There will always be poor people.
10/10/2005 1:40:05 PM
^^ A job is a human construct we made up. A job is nothing more than what you do for others in exchange for money. There is a lot of money in the world so unemployment is a failure of imagination. If there is a surplus of labor and we are not hampered by regulations then we, as people, will simply make up more things for other people to do for us. It takes time and effort but it really is that simple. The only way for this system to fail is if there is a shortage of money, which would not be unprecedented. Nevertheless, it can be easily fixed by lowering wages.[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 1:43 PM. Reason : ^]
10/10/2005 1:42:56 PM
A socialist government is not inevitable. Class conflict is a different story. Every so often the poor will try to toss out the rich, and either they'll fail and start all over again or suddenly some of them will have power and money for the first time and decide that they'd rather hold onto it than distribute it.
10/10/2005 1:48:36 PM
10/10/2005 2:41:30 PM
10/10/2005 2:47:30 PM
Europe grows more and more socialist by the day, and Grumpy's description certainly doesn't describe it very well.
10/10/2005 2:50:34 PM
10/10/2005 3:12:04 PM
^^ Bad example if your goal is to defend socialism. Europe becomes relatively poorer by the day.
10/10/2005 3:14:38 PM
10/10/2005 3:37:33 PM
Is socialism inevitable? With all the threads where Kris has been pwnt into oblivion by just about every person in TSB with a high school education...well, basically the thesis of the thread is something I'd only expect from a complete moron.(j/k )On a serious note, I'm surprised no one has mentioned it yet...Read Chapter VII ("The Curse of Machinery") @ pg. 35[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 4:20 PM. Reason : laissez faire is the only inevitability ]
10/10/2005 4:17:24 PM
An older version is actually available online. http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=6767
10/10/2005 4:42:00 PM
pwnt to oblivion?I'd just like for one person to explain how the free market failed so poorly in the great depression and why it took government involvement to actually start getting somewhere. That should really be enough in itself to shut up classicals.
10/10/2005 5:24:02 PM
Again? But we've told you sooo many times. It was the Government which broke it, the least it could do was get it going again. That said, the government didn't do much to get it going again. Only a tiny percentage of the population found make-work jobs with the Gov, and the only real structural change was the FDIC which in reality hasn't done much. Milton Friedman did an excellent job explaining the root causes of the great depression, namely the interraction between a new government institution, the federal reserve, and an old one, the gold standard. The two were fundamentally incompatible and the system was destined to collapse sooner or later.By 1930 it was too late to abandon the Federal Reserve, so the severity of the great depression was dictated by prolonged adherence to the gold standard. For example, foreign nations which abandoned the gold standard early, or simply never adopted it, faced far less economic trouble while die-hards such as France, Britain, and America which didn't abandon it until well into the 30's were devastated. [Edited on October 10, 2005 at 5:45 PM. Reason : golden rule]
10/10/2005 5:39:36 PM
10/10/2005 6:15:57 PM
so apparently it wasnt the problems of the market that brought about the depression like most agree, rather it was the government? well damn, why arent more people teaching these books you guys love so much.ever considered that maybe you might be, i dont know, ignoring other sides of this and putting too much faith in number crunching? are you looking at this from a purely economics perspective as usual?I suppose you would have been a part of that corporate conspiracy to take out FDR too, right?[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 7:16 PM. Reason : .]
10/10/2005 7:14:50 PM
10/10/2005 7:27:14 PM
so long as a majority of people who study it agree on it, there should be some stock in it. this isnt my area, im not going to claim to know much about it, but i can draw some parallels to other instances in other societies.ie: socialist modernization (best exemplified by the SAR regions now set up in China) is a good example of the government acting with (not in place of) the market to improve a nation's economy.[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 7:44 PM. Reason : .]
10/10/2005 7:40:41 PM
10/10/2005 7:51:08 PM
10/10/2005 8:05:55 PM
10/10/2005 8:19:44 PM
10/10/2005 8:35:30 PM
^^who are we talking about here?Im pretty sure the theory that the great depression was caused by the government's fucking up of monetary policy is the one most accepted by ecnonomists. Historians and sociologists might be a different story.[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 8:43 PM. Reason : ]
10/10/2005 8:42:32 PM
and thats why its silly to argue this
10/10/2005 8:44:30 PM
10/10/2005 9:10:03 PM
To continue about the majority of academics agreeing so its true line,Im thinking of all the stuff that majority of academics once believed that turned out to be complete bullshit:The Dunning School EugenicsMercantilismThe idea that samoan women can have all the unprotected sex they want and never get pregnant.Just to name a few.
10/10/2005 9:24:59 PM
I too was under the impression that it was settled history about what started the great depression. I have never heard another explanation come from either an economist or historian. There is no doubt that standard economics produces recessions. And the excesses of the late 20s were no exception. There was going to be a recession in the early 30s and it was going to be a big one. But all the history I have read, except for the ones that blame Jewish banks that is, express a common theme. A normal recession coupled with perverse governmental action created a global economic meltdown. World Trade was devastated by dramatically higher tarriffs, attempts to save the gold standard made money scarce, etc. etc.Don't believe me? Listen to one of the Governors of the Federal Reserve:http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2004/200403022/default.htm[Edited on October 10, 2005 at 11:37 PM. Reason : .]
10/10/2005 11:31:00 PM
10/10/2005 11:41:28 PM
10/11/2005 12:32:20 AM
10/11/2005 12:49:22 AM
10/11/2005 12:52:52 AM
^^^Wha? Since when has it been "recession half the time"? The previous recession was in 1991 and lasted a whole six months. Unemployment skyrocketed up to the unimaginable single digits, clearly sacrificing all our rights as human beings is a reasonable price to avoid such a calamity. The last recession started in 2001, a decade after the previous instance, and drove unemployment all the way up to 6.5%, again a calamity unheard of in human events. Come on Kris, don't over-sell your position. If you find economic liberty morally offensive that is one thing, but don't argue it hasn't served us. You may believe communism would do better, but you must also admit capitalism has done at least an OK job at allocating resources.[Edited on October 11, 2005 at 12:59 AM. Reason : Krisanthomins]
10/11/2005 12:54:53 AM
1) Lump of Labor Fallacy. There isn't just a certain number of jobs to go around. The fact that robots did all of the production jobs would free up labor resources that could be directed into other fields of industry. Would those jobs be well paying? Hard to say what would be a descenet wage since the advance in technology would lower the real price of production goods, which would increase the real wage of all other jobs. Personally, I prefer to just remember that we've been able to muddle through several hundred years of continual technological advancement and no one is any poorer for it. That neglects transitional concerns that are irrelevant to your question.2) Besides, If we were able to build robots to essentially do all of our work for us, then we wouldn't need jobs. We'd let the robots do the work for us while we watched TV. The economic problem of scarcity that systems like socialism and capitalism are designed to mitigate would be solved.
10/11/2005 2:00:13 AM
10/11/2005 2:21:48 AM
Wow, just ignore everything everyone has said and restate your possition. Great technique.
10/11/2005 12:04:24 PM
10/11/2005 2:10:04 PM
10/11/2005 2:20:03 PM