Book Description

A Silicon Valley View Of The World

How Many Jobs At Risk?

Business Shifts Or Technology Shifts?

The rise of algorithmic trading (page 113) is just a replacement of market-making operations by brokers by hedge funds. Since their role is to skim profits from the trading of traditional investors, they cannot grow indefinitely at the expense of those other funds. Since market making was not a mass employer to begin with, the net effect on employment was probably negligible. Elsewhere in investment finance, whatever gains improved back office software provided were offset by the increased need to analyse complex new financial products, leading to limited attrition of employment.

There are a number of "sharing economy" companies that are superficially technology companies. However, the secret sauce behind their business plans tend to revolve around regulatory arbitrage (to be polite). For example, some of the "taskification" (as described in this op-ed by Mary L. Gray) of work relies upon contractors not being classified as workers.

The rise of internet based booksellers (one of which I have an affiliate relationship with) is not the sole reason of the demise of mom-and-pop bookstores; most of those stores were run out of business by the early 1990s by chain bookstores using pre-World Wide Web technology.

Inequality Or Robots?

Basic Income As The Solution

[Update] The Robots Are Coming For Your Interest Rates!

The argument goes like this: As machines become more and more advanced, many workers will lose their jobs and others will see their wages fall.

Concluding Remarks

Martin Ford'swas published last year. It describes the technological forces that lead to job destruction, including white collar jobs that previously were viewed as being technology-proof. Although his views would be described as pro-free market (although he steps on some libertarian orthodoxy), he argues in favour of a Basic Income guarantee.The book was published in 2015, by Basic Books. Martin Ford was a founder of a Silicon Valley software development firm, and previously wroteThe book is filled with the glorification of technology that is the trademark of the Silicon Valley culture. He even steps lightly on the ground of the some of the wackier cult beliefs that float around there, such as The Singularity.I would note that although my background is in control systems engineering, which included robotics as a field of application, I am much less convinced about the importance of recent leaps in information technology. For example, he spends considerable space discussing the relentless shrinkage of microprocessors ("Moore's Law") , and implies that this tells us something about their usefulness. For most users, the bloat of the operating system and office applications has consumed whatever gains we got from increased chip speed. Obviously, there are application areas that did not exist in previous decades, but it is unclear whether the ability to take photos of your supper and share them on the internet represents tangible progress.The book is written in a journalistic style, and does not delve too deeply into the number of jobs that are at risk. He cites some academic studies on the matter, but the reader is not given details. Instead, he lists many examples of how technology can replace jobs that were previously seen as safe. In my view, we cannot look at just the job title, we also need to look at the size of the firm. Large firms may have many employees doing similar tasks of a limited scope; small firms seem to be less likely to have such specialisation. They can outsource some tasks which are outside their core competency, which allows for economies of scale at the outsourcing firm, but what can be outsourced is limited.For example, he accepts the marketing hype of a manufacturer of a robot that cooks "gourmet hamburgers" (page 12), and then implies that millions of jobs in the fast food industry are at risk. However, the scope of applicability is much smaller than the robot manufacturer suggests. Making a burger, gourmet or not, is a trivial task for a short order cook (based on my limited experience of working as one in high school). A new gadget that prepares burgers for you does very little; preparation work (which takes the most time) is done outside of peak order times when cooks are otherwise unoccupied. Furthermore, you have a minimum crew size; you cannot shut your restaurant operations for the day because one employee called in sick. The only place where jobs could be cut are franchise operations which have a limited menu and a large enough burger order flow that an incremental pickup in efficiency would allow them to trim a cook or two per shift. However, a fast food chain restaurant is already hyper-efficient at producing its limited menu choices. Most of the job losses that will result from economies of scale will already been incurred when the franchise started operation.Of the examples he cites, the ones that seem the most worrisome in terms of job losses revolved around document and image recognition software. Medical personnel whose speciality is image analysis, and para-legals who search documents for records that are pertinent for a legal case can have their tasks replaced by software. The job market for law graduates has been notoriously weak, and this could be one of the factors behind that.The need to go beyond the estimates provided by start up firms to see the impact of technology changes means that it is hard to have much confidence about any job loss forecasts.In my view, technology stories are red herrings distracting us from shifts in industry structure.Ford gives a non-specialist overview of economic thinking on jobs and technology. He notes that economists generally dismissed these worries, arguing that increased productivity makes everyone better off. Instead, the most fashionable worry at present is that we will not have enough workers due to an ageing population. However, his argument is that disappointing growth and job creation now is a sign that we could be moving towards a "jobless future."Although he is in the free market economic camp, his prescription why this jobless future is possible would not pass ideological tests. He presents what are now standard arguments about inequality slowing growth. In his view, inequality is driven by technology. For example, he complains that the word "robot" only appears once in Piketty's almost 700 page work on inequality However, I do not see a cast iron linkage between inequality and technology; that is, if inequality is the problem, we do not need to reference robots (like Piketty). Economic outcomes reflect policy preferences, and we have seen inequality rise and fall based on changing economic frameworks. I see no reason to fear "techno feudalism" in particular; societies managed to be feudal without the aid of microprocessors.From the perspective of watching intellectual trends, the most interesting part of the book is the suggestion that a guaranteed income should be implemented. The advantage of a basic income from the perspective of free market proponents is that it allows them to dismantle the "bureaucratic" welfare state. However, Ford's worry about economic incentives leaves him to suggest that conditions or incentives be built into the plan (for example, extra payments for those taking entering educational programmes) would bring back bureaucratic meddling through the back door.The obvious problem with basic income schemes is that non-trivial payments require "high" marginal income tax rates in order to avoid a massive over-stimulation of demand.As Ford observes, about the only reason such a proposal might be feasible in the Unites States is that it lacks a Value-Added Tax (VAT). The idea being that it might be easier to bring in the new VAT than it would be to crank up income taxes to "high" rates. Other developed countries have a VAT already, and so rates on existing taxes would have to be raised.The alternative of government programmes of direct job creation was ignored within the book. This could be viewed as an example of the general lack of traction behind the Job Guarantee concept.In a similar vein, see this Bloomberg article on how robots are allegedly going to keep interest rates down. It's based on discussions at the latest Davos summit, and provides yet another example of automation can replace "high level" jobs. With current technology, it should be straightforward to develop an AI routine to write the self-interested flimsy analysis that is the hallmark of the Davos summit.The whole thesis revolves around:That is, jobs will be destroyed by the "machines,"We had a major boost in productivity in the early post-war era, and jobs were created, not lost. The reason is that we had a macro framework that supported job creation then; whereas we now have a framework that favours the destruction of jobs (in the developed countries). Even if technological progress stops dead, we are stuck with an economic structure that favours slow growth.This book is journalistic, and not a work of economic theory. The book provides a lot of background on how businesses can drive down their wage costs, and the wealth of anecdotes indicates the breadth of the issue. My feeling is that these opportunities are mainly available to relatively large firms. It is also interesting in that it shows how interest in a basic income guarantee is spreading across different groups. I have deep misgivings about such plans, but they represent one of the few policies on the radar screen that present a chance of changing the structure of the economy.Finally, the book is available at Amazon: Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future (affiliate link). (c) Brian Romanchuk 2015