Will Capitalism Survive The Robot Revolution?

Economic experts are trying to figure out a question that just two decades ago seemed ridiculous: If 90 percent of human jobs are replaced by robots in the next 50 years, something now considered plausible, is capitalism still the ideal economic system to champion? 

No one is certain about the answer, but the question is making everyone nervous, and forcing people to dig deep inside themselves to discover the kind of future they want.

After America beat Russia in the Cold War, most of the world generally considered capitalism to be the hands-down best system on which to base economies and democracies. For decades, few doubted capitalism’s merit, which was made stronger by thriving globalization and a skyrocketing world net worth. In 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell, the world had only 198 billionaires. Now, according to Forbes, there are 1,826 of them in 2016.

Despite growing riches, when banks collapsed in 2007 during the Great Recession, the world stepped back and wondered aloud if a more nuanced approach to economic progress was needed. These doubts of 21st century capitalism helped set the stage for an economic paradigm shift just starting to appear — economists observing jobs not just disappearing to other countries, but disappearing off the face of the Earth. The culprit: robots and software.

At first, the warnings of this weren’t very loud. After all, economies and companies thrive because of modernization, which includes upgrading with new tech to make and save money. But in the last year, a growing chorus of people are beginning to see a tipping point, maybe a decade in the future, where tens of millions of jobs may be lost in as short as a five-year period — which would be many more times the jobs lost during the Great Recession.

Already today, there are countries trying out driverless trucks to deliver goods. Truck driving is one of the most prevalent jobs in America, with about 3.5 million drivers. What will we do in five years if they are replaced with vehicles that don’t need human intervention to get on and off a highway to deliver goods?

Capitalism says this is the nature of the competitive economy. However, those jobs that are replaced will never be regained, and truck drivers and waiters will not easily find other jobs. Some will likely need to be provided for by the state, otherwise grown men and women will surely pick up Molotov cocktails and show the world a thing or two about worker revolutions.

The only difference between this and other historical revolutions is they won’t be alone. This time it’s not a problem of the rich versus the poor. In 20 years, everyone’s job will be at stake, even that of my wife, who trained 19 years in college to become a practicing Ob/Gyn — and still today has $100,000 in school debt. But machines will deliver babies and remove cervical cancer better than people. And software will do taxes more efficiently than accountants. And articles will be crafted better by news aggregating software than living, breathing journalists.

Everyone, including even the US president, is at risk of being outperformed by a machine, and eventually being jobless and without income.

So, now that we know we’re all going to lose our jobs, what system can make it so humans will still be happy and live better without employment? 

Clearly, it’s not capitalism.

Whichever system we choose will have to incorporate an improving standard of life for people and society. For this reason, I tend to support a Universal Basic Income as one way to desire robots to take our jobs but not leave the world poor. However, that doesn’t really say what will happen to economies after the robot revolution is really underway.
Some people have said a fully automated luxury communism will prevail once robots take all the jobs — an economic system that favors technology pampering humans all day long. Communism is a historically loaded word that few people like.

Additionally, it insinuates being chained to community and social service, something I think our individualistic-minded world may scoff at. The 21st century has made people feel more entitled than ever, and, frankly, with so much amazing innovation humans have come up with, we deserve it. We deserve to be pampered by technology. We deserve to never again work a day in our lives if we don’t want to. We deserve not to be bothered by government or society if we’re not bothering others. And we deserve to pursue lofty dreams instead struggling to earn a handful of dollars.

In fact, I doubt money will even survive this century. If anything, in the future, only knowledge will have tradable value — the knowledge to create better machines, software and experiences from technology. Around this time — surely before 2075 — the singularity will be possible, a point where people connect themselves to artificial intelligence and essentially disappear into a sea of growing and organizing information. Then it’s anyone’s guess what happens to the world.

However, back to reality here in 2016: Whatever economic system does prevail in the next 25 years, it won’t be like anything we thought of before. Karl Marx and Adam Smith simply did not account for what indefinite robot labor would mean to a new world increasingly reliant on microprocessors and 1s and 0s for it’s every step forward.

Whatever happens, it’s probably best to keep an open mind about the future and new economic models. Many of us are running on a financial treadmill right now, trying to get ahead and realize the American Dream of riches and the good life. But in the future, the American Dream may be more about discovery of our newly acquired trans-human possibilities and enjoying the technology that has made our modern lives so simple and easy. 

I think I can get used to that.
TechCrunch: http://tcrn.ch/1RIvvWI

 

« Eight Reasons Why US CEOs Care About New EU Privacy Laws
Execs: We’re Not Responsible For Cybersecurity »

Infosecurity Europe
CyberSecurity Jobsite
Perimeter 81

Directory of Suppliers

CSI Consulting Services

CSI Consulting Services

Get Advice From The Experts: * Training * Penetration Testing * Data Governance * GDPR Compliance. Connecting you to the best in the business.

Jooble

Jooble

Jooble is a job search aggregator operating in 71 countries worldwide. We simplify the job search process by displaying active job ads from major job boards and career sites across the internet.

Practice Labs

Practice Labs

Practice Labs is an IT competency hub, where live-lab environments give access to real equipment for hands-on practice of essential cybersecurity skills.

XYPRO Technology

XYPRO Technology

XYPRO is the market leader in HPE Non-Stop Security, Risk Management and Compliance.

Alvacomm

Alvacomm

Alvacomm offers holistic VIP cybersecurity services, providing comprehensive protection against cyber threats. Our solutions include risk assessment, threat detection, incident response.

F-Secure

F-Secure

F-Secure defends enterprises and consumers against everything from opportunistic ransomware infections to advanced cyber attacks.

Cloudbric

Cloudbric

Cloudbric is a cloud-based web security service, offering award-winning WAF, DDoS protection, and SSL, all in a full-service package.

KZ-CERT

KZ-CERT

KZ-CERT is the national Computer Emergency Response Team for Kazakhstan.

Resource Centre for Cyber Forensics (RCCF)

Resource Centre for Cyber Forensics (RCCF)

RCCF is a pioneering institute, pursuing research activities in the area of Cyber Forensics.

Bolton Labs

Bolton Labs

Bolton Labs is a leading provider cybersecurity services, tools, and analysis for MSPs and organizations who want to scale their security offerings.

Arsenal Recon

Arsenal Recon

Arsenal Recon are digital forensics experts, providing consultancy services and powerful software tools to improve the analysis of electronic evidence.

Corrata

Corrata

Corrata is an award-winning provider of mobile security and data control solutions for enterprises.

Hut Six Security

Hut Six Security

Train, test and track your Information Security culture through information security awareness training and customised phishing simulation campaigns.

Police CyberAlarm

Police CyberAlarm

Police CyberAlarm is a free tool to help members understand and monitor malicious cyber activity. This service is made up of two parts; monitoring and vulnerability scanning.

ESC - Enterprise Security Center

ESC - Enterprise Security Center

ESC is a system house specializing exclusively in IT security - Security Implementation & Optimization, Operations, Managed Security Services.

VISO Cyber Security

VISO Cyber Security

VISO provide Cyber Security Consulting and CISO as a Service to companies who need to augment their leadership teams with information security expertise.

GeoComply

GeoComply

GeoComply provides fraud prevention and cybersecurity solutions that detect location fraud and help verify a user's true digital identity.

DeXpose

DeXpose

DeXpose is a hybrid dark/deep web monitoring and attack surface mapping platform to help you find compromised data or exposed assets related to your organization way before threat actors.

Zenzero

Zenzero

Zenzero simplifies technology adoption and supports our customers through managed and outsourced IT support.

DeviQA

DeviQA

DeviQA provide best-in-class quality assurance services to companies of all sizes.

Cyex

Cyex

Cyex helps people to become cyber wise. We enable our clients to find, track and improve cyber awareness in one place.