akwoo, on 2013-April-04, 18:46, said:
I know I'm an exception, but I have to say that there are many cases where I prefer interacting with a machine. I also think a lot of this is cultural; people who are used to interacting with machines and expected to will like it more. Just a few years ago, many people said people would never buy goods online because they preferred to see what they were buying as well as interact with a human when buying it.
I might prefer to have a cashier ring up my purchases at the supermarket, but the preference is pretty slight. If I have to wait 1 minute for a person, I prefer the automated cashier machine.
We're not far from the day where a McDonald's in Switzerland (probably the highest wage area in the world) has onsite at any given time only a manager and a computer technician. Thirty years ago this McDonald's would need a staff of twenty; right now it's running on a staff of ten.
It's funny how this effect is stronger in societies with less unequality. I am now visiting the USA, and there are people employed to pack my groceries. This job does not exist in most European countries, I have only seen it in countries with more unequalities. The automated McDonald's restaurant won't appear in the USA first, rather I'd expect it to emerge in either Switzerland or Japan.
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The German experience suggests that 'far enough' is not very far. Some German Laender start putting their schoolchildren into different tracks as early as 4th grade, and while undoubtedly they lose some talent through 'misplacing' students, it doesn't seem to be very much, and being able to have all their talented students be taught by competent teachers seems to more than make up for it. I happen to think the German system is a terrible one for reasons of social cohesion and because it fails to educate some people enough to really be citizens in a participatory democracy (but they have different ideas on what a democracy is and how one should run), but as far as the technical and economic needs of a society are concerned, it seems to work pretty well.
Germany's success through the crisis is mostly because it has a economy of tangible things. A comparison between Europe's two biggest economies shows what I mean. In 2012 the balance of trade for Germany was about $3000 per capita. In France, it was -$1800. Ergo: People want German stuff but not French.
Both countries host 32 of the top 500 companies.
Germany's top 10: VW (tech), E.ON (energy), Daimler (tech), Siemens (tech), Allianz (financial), BASF (tech), BMW (tech), Metro (market) , Munich Re (financial), Telekom (utility).
France's top 10: Total (energy), Axa (financial), BNP Paribas (financial), GDF Suez (energy), Carrefour (market), Credit Agricole (financial), SocGen (financial), EDF (energy), Peugeot (tech), BPCE (financial)
Spot the difference. The first company creating real tangible things in France is in 9th spot. In Germany it's three of the top four. And if big doesn't mean anything, VW made a handsome profit (22B) as well.
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All the evidence suggests that a world where a lot of people can't do 'useful work' is not a happy place, whether everyone is generously supported or not.
Re: Augmenting people by machines - unfortunately it seems that it is economically only useful to augment those who have the requisite level of intelligence and education, so this possibility doesn't reduce inequality but exacerbates it.
There is some truth in this. We're starting to see a "digital divide" emerging. If you have never worked with computers and such and now at age 50+ you are looking for a new job... Good luck!