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			by Michael Snyder 
			September 29, 2013 
			
			from
			
			TheEconomicCollapseBlog Website 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			  
			
			What are human workers going to do when 
			super-intelligent robots and computers are better than us at doing
			
			everything?   
			  
			
			That is one of the questions that a new 
			study (The 
			Future of Employment - How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerization) 
			by Dr. Carl Frey and Dr. Michael Osborne of Oxford 
			University sought to address, and what they concluded was that 47 
			percent of all U.S. jobs could be automated within the next 20 
			years.  
			  
			
			Considering the fact that the percentage 
			of the U.S. population that is employed is already
			
			far lower than it was a decade ago, it is frightening to think 
			that tens of millions more jobs could disappear due to technological 
			advances over the next couple of decades. I have written
			extensively about how we are already losing millions of jobs to 
			super cheap labor on the other side of the globe.  
			  
			
			What are middle class families going to 
			do as technology also takes away huge numbers of our jobs at an ever 
			increasing pace? 
			  
			
			We live during a period of history when 
			knowledge is increasing an an exponential rate. In the past, when 
			human workers were displaced by technology it also created new kinds 
			of jobs that the world had never seen before.  
			  
			
			But what happens when the day arrives 
			when computers and robots can do almost everything more cheaply and 
			more efficiently than humans can? 
			  
			
			For employers, there are a whole host of 
			advantages that come with replacing human workers with technology. 
			Robots and computers never complain, they never get tired, they 
			never need vacation, they never show up late, they never waste time 
			on Facebook, they don't need any health benefits and there are a 
			vast array of rules, regulations and taxes that you must deal with 
			when you hire a human worker. 
			  
			
			If you could get a task done more 
			cheaply and more efficiently by replacing a human worker with 
			technology, why wouldn't you want to do it? 
			  
			
			We are already starting to see this 
			happen on a mass scale, and according to Dr. Frey and Dr. Osborne, 
			close to half of all of our jobs could be automated within the next 
			20 years. 
			  
			
			A recent article posted on smartplanet.com 
			described how this process might play out... 
			
				
				The automation of half the nation’s 
				jobs will occur in two phases, the study says:  
				
					
						- 
						
						The first wave will affect 
						(and is affecting) jobs in transportation/logistics, 
						production labor, administrative support, services, 
						sales, and construction.   
						- 
						
						The second wave - propelled 
						by artificial intelligence - will affect jobs in 
						management, science, engineering, and the arts.  
					 
				 
				
				Just as interesting as the study is 
				the response provided by Gary Reber, founder and executive 
				director of
				
				For Economic Justice, who argues that owners of the means of 
				production will actually thrive as such a shift takes place. 
				  
				
				Those who rely on 9-to-5 standard 
				employment arrangements for subsistence are likely to  suffer 
				the most in the automation wave.  
				  
				
				As Reber put it:  
				
					
					‘Full employment is not an 
					objective of businesses. Companies strive to keep labor 
					input and other costs at a minimum.” 
				 
			 
			
			This is one of the reasons why the U.S. 
			economy will never produce enough jobs for everyone ever again. 
			  
			
			If technology can outperform humans, it 
			is only rational for companies to replace humans with technology. 
			And this is even starting to happen in fields that require very high 
			levels of education. 
			  
			
			Just look at what is happening in the 
			medical field. Today, millions of people turn to websites such as
			
			WebMD 
			for their medical needs, but this is only just the beginning. 
			 
			  
			
			Check out this excerpt from a recent 
			Bloomberg article entitled "Doctor 
			Robot Will See You Shortly"... 
			
				
				Johnson & Johnson
				
				proposes to replace anesthesiologists during simple 
				procedures such as colonoscopies - not with nurse practitioners, 
				but with machines.  
				
				  
				
				Sedasys, which dispenses propofol and 
				monitors a patient automatically, was recently approved for use 
				in healthy adult patients who have no particular risk of 
				complications.  
				  
				
				Johnson & Johnson will lease the 
				machines to doctor’s offices for $150 per procedure - cleverly 
				set well below the $600 to $2,000 that anesthesiologists usually 
				charge. 
			 
			
			Certainly we will always need doctors. 
			  
			
			But many of the tasks that doctors once 
			performed will now be performed by technology. For example, have you heard about "OnStar 
			for the Body" yet?   
			
			  
			
			Some of these new "wearable technologies" 
			are more than a little bit creepy... 
			
				
				Smart, cheaper and point-of-care 
				sensors, such as those being developed for the
				
				Nokia Sensing XCHALLENGE, will further enable the 'Digital 
				Checkup' from anywhere.  
				  
				
				The world of 'Quantified Self' and 
				'Quantified Health' will lead to a new generation of wearable 
				technologies partnered with
				
				Artificial Intelligence that will help decipher and make 
				this information actionable. 
				  
				
				And this 'actionability' is key. 
				 
				
				  
				
				We 
				hear the term Big Data used in various contexts; when applied to 
				health information it will likely be the smart integration of 
				massive data sets from the 'Internet of things' with the small 
				data about your activity, mood, and other information. 
				 
				  
				
				When properly filtered, this data 
				set can give insights on a macro level - population health - and 
				micro - 'OnStar 
				for the Body' (below video) with a personalized 'check engine light' to 
				help identify individual problems before they further develop 
				into expensive, difficult-to-treat or fatal conditions. 
				
				  
				
				  
				
				  
	
				
				  
				
				  
			 
			
			We are also seeing humans being replaced 
			in other fields as well.  
			  
			
			For instance, DARPA 
			has developed a 
			
			robot named "Atlas" that it hopes will be used in 
			"disaster-response scenarios"... 
			
				
				DARPA's Virtual Robotics Challenge 
				entered a new phase in July, when Atlas - a 6-foot-2-inch, 
				330-pound robot developed by Boston Dynamics - was introduced to 
				seven teams tasked with training it for disaster-response 
				scenarios.  
				  
				
				The end goal? "Supervised autonomy" 
				so that Atlas and its successors can step into situations too 
				dangerous for humans. 
			 
			
			I don't know about you, but I don't 
			really want "Terminator" to show up when my family is in the middle 
			of a disaster, but this is where things are headed. 
			  
			
			And as technology increases, a lot of 
			good paying middle class jobs are going to be vulnerable. 
			 
			  
			
			In fact,
			
			one study of employment data that examined statistics from 20 
			countries found that, 
			
				
				"almost all the jobs disappearing 
				are in industries that pay middle-class wages, ranging from 
				$38,000 to $68,000." 
			 
			
			Those are exactly the sort of 
			"breadwinner jobs" that middle class families
			
			rely upon. And of course working class jobs are being replaced 
			by technology as well.  
			  
			
			According to
			
			MIT Technology Review, a $22,000 humanoid robot named Baxter has 
			been developed that can easily be programmed to do jobs that have 
			never been automated before... 
			
				
				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 what are human workers going to do 
			when robots are making all of our products? That is a very good question. 
			Incredibly, robots are now even replacing human factory workers in 
			China.  
			  
			
			The following comes 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 who benefits from all of this? 
			  
			
			Those that own the big corporations that 
			dominate our economy certainly benefit. They aren't going to need to 
			hire as many of us to work for them, and they are going to make even 
			bigger profits than before. 
			  
			
			Meanwhile, the
			
			gap between the wealthy and the poor will grow even larger.  
			
			  
			
			The 
			only thing that most people have to offer in the economic 
			marketplace is their labor, and the demand for that labor is 
			decreasing with each passing day. 
			
				
			 
			
			And if you think that your job could 
			"never be automated", you might want to think again. 
			  
			
			We are rapidly getting to the point
			
			where even driving will be automated... 
			
				
				Brace yourself. In a few years, your 
				car will be able to drop you off at the door of a shopping 
				center or airport terminal, go park itself and return when 
				summoned with a smartphone app. Audi demonstrated such a system 
				at this year's Consumer Electronics Show. 
				  
				
				At your next dinner party, ask for a 
				show of hands of the people who'd want that. 
				  
				
				Everybody? Anybody want a car that doesn't 
				crash?  
				
				  
				
				At this month's Frankfurt auto show, mega-auto supplier 
				Continental announced a partnership with
				IBM to help 
				bring autonomous vehicles to market, with "zero accidents" as a 
				possible result. Volvo has promised to injury-proof its cars by 
				2020.  
				  
				
				GM and Carnegie Mellon aim to 
				develop autonomous technology to eliminate car accidents. 
			 
			
			So what will happen to the 3.1 
			million Americans that drive trucks for a living once all 
			driving is automated? What will happen to the millions of 
			other Americans that drive buses, taxis and limos once all driving 
			is automated? 
			  
			
			That is something to think about. 
			  
			
			And researchers are even trying to 
			create computers that "seem 
			human" when you have a conversation with them... 
			
				
				On 14 September, researchers will
				
				gathered in Derry, Northern Ireland, to demonstrate their 
				latest efforts. If any of them has created a machine that 
				successfully mimics a human, they will leave $100,000 richer. 
				  
				
				The money is being put up by Hugh 
				Loebner, a New York based philanthropist.  
				  
				
				His goal, he says, is total 
				unemployment for all human beings throughout the world. He wants 
				robots to do all the work. And the first step towards that is 
				apparently to develop computers that seem human when you chat to 
				them. 
			 
			
			So if your job involves a telephone, you 
			are in danger of being phased out.  
			  
			
			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. 
			 
			
			We truly are entering an unprecedented 
			time in human history. 
			  
			
			Instead of robots violently taking over 
			society like so many movies have portrayed, they are slowly starting 
			to "replace" us instead.  
			  
			
			A recent
			
			Wired article described what this transition might look like as 
			it picks up steam... 
			
				
				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. 
			 
			
			Are you ready for the "robot takeover"? 
			  
			
			The world of employment is never going 
			to be the same again. Technology has already surpassed human workers 
			in a whole host of arenas, and this transition is only going to 
			become more rapid in the years ahead. 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
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