Is there a shortage of viable jobs that will cause a lot more hardship in the future?
Posted by Jstork 7 years, 9 months ago to Philosophy
I saw some statistics that showed the increase of service based jobs and the decrease of resource based or productivity based jobs over the past decades. I think this is a dangerous trend that will eventually lead to mass hardship. This is a multifaceted issue that has many different causes and potential solutions. I look forward to hearing your thoughts and lessons.
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The primary driver for the creation of the modern city was migration from the country. (The first cities were successful hunting camps. In their abundance, they began growing grains but needed more room for it, so farming was taken out of the city. See Jane Jacobs on The Economy of Cities. Cities did not evolve from farming villages. Also, it still continues, actually. I wrote a paper on farming within megacities today for a graduate geography class.)
The point of that here is that your view of their poverty is relative to your own wealth. They have a better life than they would on farms, otherwise, they would leave the city. Few people do that. I
I also believe that people are the most precious resource on the planet. It is hard to imaging how there could be "too many." At then end of the last ice age, a tribe of 300 might have a genius born once every three generations. Progress is much faster now because we have numerically more geniuses.
served by a person rather than by a machine. But
perhaps the businesses have been finding that they
cannot afford the human employees, even if it got them a little more business. Instituting lais-
sez-faire and getting rid of the minimum wage
might do some good in such areas. But if it takes too long, perhaps many employers would never return to having the human employees, even if they could afford it; they might think they could still better afford the robots.
(I have never taken welfare or unemployment)
The American capitalist system has worked because historically workers worked at jobs in industries that payed enough for the workers to be able to buy the goods they produced. That started coming to an end in the 70s and 80s when corporations decided that profit margins could be improved by moving manufacturing overseas, paying workers $5 a day, and paying to ship the goods back to the US. So good paying jobs for those with less than college degrees over the last 30 years have disappeared, and now many with college degrees are having a harder and harder time finding a job that will actually pay the bills. Never mind that the current generation is the first generation carrying huge student loan debts to get those degrees.
40% of Americans are on some kind of government assistance. 45% are on food stamps!! That alone should tell you how bad the availability of "viable jobs" really is. They simply do not exist, and unless we can get manufacturing back into the US we can look forward to a future of McJobs for everyone.
Automation is everywhere in manufacturing also
I think that government regulations are the cause of a lot of current jobs springing up. Paper pushing, dealing with complex laws and the litigious society. Health care is replete with useless work being done by humans to keep all sorts of records to prevent malpractice claims.
I don't deny that world trade has taken us very far. But nefarious actors can cut trade off. Pirates are an obvious offender. So would be an enemy power.
To the extent we do not have resourced-based jobs in this country, we remain vulnerable in case the Global Elite should decide to declare war against America.
When I wrote this, I was thinking of some what we call developing nations and some of the problems I saw there. I spent a bit of time in congested, highly populated urban areas where poverty was rampant. Significant portions of the population were struggling to attain the basic essentials and keep a roof over their head. The only way many could feed themselves was through a functionally unregulated economy where you could do whatever you wanted to make a couple of dollars. The resale of cheap products along with many "service jobs" such as bicycle taxis, hairdressers, store service employees was prevalent. In spite of this, there was a lot of poverty.
In smaller municipalities, away from the
larger cities, there was less poverty/destitution as well as less congestion. Mote jobs were tied to farming, resources and manufacturing of products. Less jobs such as hairdressers, store clerks, and miscellaneous item resale.
I think I see trends like this in the "developed world" and wonder if we are headed the way of many of the larger, congested urban centers of "developing nations."
I am beginning to think overpopulation is one of the main factors along with others.
Thoughts.
There was a time when Bell Telephone and hundreds of other smaller firms hired thousands of operators. Now, it is all automated. We are our own telephone switching offices, setting up video conferences on our own phones.
The announcement that service sector jobs will eclipse manufacturing jobs is as old as the curves on the graphs. We have known this for decades.
And yet, if you look at the average American home workshop, you will find inexpensive yet sophisticated power tools: saws, routers, lathes, ... and tools that did not exist a lifetime ago: my wife is building a home security system with little computers and little cameras and little switches and gates and most of it without wires...
3-D printing is still just opening up. Each home can make what it wants -- unless, of course, you browse Amazon and find another home making one like it but better and cheaper. All commerce is service.