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How about we stop in 1950s America and not go all the way to Venezuela?
There should be some space between glorified bum and debt driven consumerism.
Again--I can rattle off a lot of service folks who would beg to differ after their jobs were automated away.
Can’t happen anymore, not since technology has made everyone so powerful in relationship to our environment and social structure. What’s MORE likely is that an overreaching government would be ignored by the populace and starved of taxes and legitimacy until it largely disappeared.
People tend to romanticize the past, so present examples are best. But you could go back to 1930's America. I think we had the last of the Communist planks implemented by good old FDR.
What service jobs were automated?
Hogwash. How many secretary's and operators were replaced by automated call attendants? How many managers have secretaries now after the computer age?
How many bank tellers have been replaced by ATMs?
How many checkers have been replace by auto-checkout terminals at big box stores?
I could go on and on. Manufacturing, service, you name it. Automation is everywhere.
Unions lead to higher productivity:
http://www.epi.org/publication/webfeatures_snapshots_20070620/
Interesting you reference an article written by a guy who's never held a real job in his life, and has certainly benefited from having large useless organizations in place to give him said jobs.
I was in a union once. Selling souvenirs at Qualcomm stadium when I was in college. I asked if I could not be in the union when I signed up for the job, and was told that wasn't an option. It wasn't a bad job, but never did figure out what that $4 a paycheck was doing for me that I couldn't have done for myself.
http://lawofwork.ca/?p=6881
So, the current examples would be Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Iceland.
And the author of this study appears to have spent some years as legal counsel for... a union! Clearly an unbiased source if there ever was one. Interestingly, Venezuela and Zimbabwe, the countries I mentioned, both have unions. So happy and unhappy countries can have unions?
you are implying that this guy, having not been in a union, is drawing bad conclusions?
What the union does is use the bargaining power of many to negotiate better pay and benefits than any individual would be able to do on their own.
should be easy for you to point out his inaccuracies then.
Venezuela and Zimbabwe, the countries I mentioned, both have unions.
I'm saying a guy who has never had to work a day in his life at anything most of us would recognize as real work is only going to bring highly abstracted "theoretical" knowledge to the table. It always sounds good, but is rarely proven out in real life.
Yes, socialism. It brings even the most capable man down to the level of the lowliest, most timid employee. Claiming to benefit mankind, but helping no actual individual man.
Unions lead to higher productivity:
http://www.epi.org/publication/webfeatures_snapshots_20070620/
We all know how the unions destroyed Hostess-Twinkies with their silly unproductive rules.
You also apparently believe that adding a huge supply on a market (the labor market) doesn't depress prices.
Despite mounting pressures – including a nationwide crackdown on vehicle-dwelling – America’s modern-day nomads show great resilience. But how much of that toughness should our culture require for basic membership? And when do all the impossible choices start to tear people – a society – apart? The growing ranks of folks living on the road suggest the answer might be: much sooner than we think.
Strategist says
We all know how the unions destroyed Hostess-Twinkies with their silly unproductive rules.
Actually you think that because of the propaganda that you read. But the truth is much more interesting. I encourage you to dig a little deeper. (truth is the company was purposely killed by Mitt Romney hedge fund types)
Unions probably played a very small part (if any) in Hostess-Twinkies demise.
Robots have a great deal of advantages over immigrants.
Unions were the only reason the company went broke. If you know something others don't, please tell us.
I was in a union once. Selling souvenirs at Qualcomm stadium when I was in college. I asked if I could not be in the union when I signed up for the job, and was told that wasn't an option. It wasn't a bad job, but never did figure out what that $4 a paycheck was doing for me that I couldn't have done for myself.
Good, please point out where his lack of experience has allowed him to draw poor conclusions then.
Unions lessen the inherent advantage businesses have over employees during compensation negotiations.
Seems obvious, he equated unions with production.
You can thank them for the 40 hour work week, holidays, overtime pay
Did it pay more than minimum wage?
It’s not a great representation of a union job because the work is entirely unskilled and you were extremely replaceable.
The ideal work week according to SCRUM is 30 hours, so no thanks for overworking me. And America has significantly less holiday and vacation time than many other countries, so again, thanks for nothing.
Maybe lazy people need unions to do everything for them, but then again, the people who benefit most from socialism are typically the laziest.
I see you've gone back to recycling your talking points, and have nothing new or relevant to back up your assertions based on political talking heads who have never held a real job in their lives. I'd love to live in your theoretical world where things work out exactly like you hypothesize them, but in real life I'll stick with counting on ME when I need to get something done, not some socialist organization who wants to dip their hands in my pocket for doing something I could easily do myself.
The family has not done any better financially because of his union
Heraclitusstudent saysWhat service jobs were automated?
anon_3b28c saysHogwash. How many secretary's and operators were replaced by automated call attendants? How many managers have secretaries now after the computer age?
How many bank tellers have been replaced by ATMs?
How many checkers have been replace by auto-checkout terminals at big box stores?
I could go on and on. Manufacturing, service, you name it. Automation is everywhere.
I'll ask again, if automation is everywhere, then why doesn't it show up in productivity number: very weak in the past decade.
Tellers have been there for decades, and secretaries are gone only in the sense that bosses have to do directly everything they were doing, i.e. it's a loss of service not automation. So are auto-checkouts, and auto checkins at airlines. Maybe web sites replace calling people but this is a very limited productivity enhancement, and not one that qualifies as a wave of automation.
Should I answer again? Automation has been since the 80s. It followed the typical route of diminishing returns like anything else.
Technology and automation made auto checkins possible.
Ok so you mean there WAS automation, but we now no longer have automation going on?
The managers no longer have the convenience to ask someone for a service. They have to do it themselves. If not then tell us specifically which part of a secretary's job is now done automatically: writing a letter? screening incoming calls? Calling a person for a service?
I'll ask again, if automation is everywhere, then why doesn't it show up in productivity number: very weak in the past decade.
There are about 370 million people living and eating in America. According to labor rolls, about 64% of them work. So that means we have so much being produced that everything available is produced by about half the population. The rest are lawyers.
No, I've explained it twice now. Look up the law of diminishing returns:
if all we have now are minor enhancements, then why the hell does it still have a large impact on labor? As large as in the past? You're not saying.
Plus you assume technological innovation has stopped, which makes no sense at all.
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Not a race to the bottom?
#economy