FINALLY!!!

Feb. 24th, 2019 11:57 am
peristaltor: (Orson Approves)
[personal profile] peristaltor
From the NYT, some sanity regarding the completely screwed-up tax laws that are contributing to our growing un- and underemployment problem.

We may not want to tax innovation, but there is no reason to subsidize investments that are designed merely to take away jobs. At the very least, a tax on robots would force businesses to think harder about when and where to deploy them.


This advance of technology into the work-place need not be relegated solely to the robots, as the article notes. Simply define "robot" more generally as a piece of technology that makes a job easier to do and you find that this has been a problem for decades, if not centuries. I may get deep into the weeds of this problem… later.

Date: 2019-04-23 02:16 am (UTC)
garote: (Default)
From: [personal profile] garote
He opened an automated garage. Robotic widgets are doing the work.

Date: 2019-04-24 05:40 am (UTC)
garote: (Default)
From: [personal profile] garote
The tax benefits are indeed overwhelming, as they should be, because a business that takes up the valuable time of another human in performing some kind of labor should be paying a fair amount towards the care and feeding of that human.

The scenario I am describing is essentially what has happened countless times all over the world and is generally considered a cornerstone of modern civilization: Automation using tools.

Crank it back a couple dozen generations, to a hundred peasants threshing wheat and sowing seeds by hand. Drop a modern tractor in front of them, with a couple of handy attachments. Five of them will do the work that took all season in a couple of days. The other 95 will kick back and do nothing. Praise be.

What's different currently about this cycle of innovation that is actually upsetting people? Nothing. It's not the technology that's the problem. The technology is a red herring. The problem is access to capital. It's all being sucked up by a collection of incredibly large, incredibly horizontally or vertically integrated corporations and being redistributed to the very rich, and to a far lesser degree the middle class.

I get the impression that most modern middle-class people are convinced that the solution to this problem is a greatly expanded welfare state. I.e. your solution: Make the government tax the fuck out of the products of these large corporations.

I think the better solution is more direct. Put the teeth back into the useless flapping gums of the antitrust laws, and tear these corporations up into pieces. ESPECIALLY those in the god damn banking industry.

Date: 2019-04-25 07:26 pm (UTC)
garote: (golden violin)
From: [personal profile] garote
We should call it Better Direct Solution More, so we can refer to is as BDSM. :D

Interesting tale about the stocking frame. Do you think it was the correct decision? I get the impression that the women hanging out at home knitting stockings might have had a different opinion than the royalty -- if they'd been allowed by society at the time to make better use of themselves.

I was being a bit sarcastic about "kick back and do nothing". Back in the days of peasants, if the tractor had suddenly appeared, the lords would most likely kick the suddenly redundant peasants off their land. Roving bands of angry, hungry peasants would become a problem, and there would probably be a confrontation and a slaughter, since the Peasants are Revolting. But I don't think this hypothetical bungled deployment of the tractor is an argument against the tractor. It's an argument against the feudal system.

Also, when you say, "the current laws favor only those who own the tech, not anyone else," I don't think that's truthful. All the usual capitalist effects still apply. The people who use this still largely hypothetical robotic white-collar human replacing tech, even without owning it, still derive benefit from it the usual way: They get work done and don't have to spend money supporting a human for employment purposes. And the people who neither own or use the tech still derive benefit from it in the usual way: If the service is cheaper without a robot performing it, the price goes down.

Unless of course there's a big fat monopolistic electronics company sucking all the money out of the economy by fixing the price and using the difference to buy up any potential competitors.

As an aside, I learned recently that an acquaintance of mine - a software developer turned IT manager at my old stomping grounds inside Apple - recently let herself get poached back over from Google where she'd been for a few years, and now makes a yearly salary of $450,000. That's not including other stock and healthcare benefits, that's just the cash portion of her salary. Among other things I could say about that wage, I think it's proof that too few companies are making too much money, and need some real competition.

Profile

peristaltor: (Default)
peristaltor

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 15th, 2026 07:47 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios