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Come on... I suppose you'd rather have the heavy industries
back, pumping their filth into the air around *your* home and killing *your* kids. Give me a break. Also, your assumption that automation will eliminate jobs was debunked in the 50s. It's just not true. Automation will eliminate *some* jobs, but others are created. We need to be knowledge workers not laborers. "Vito" wrote in message ... Jonathan Ganz wrote: Ultimately, the only way to improve the situation is for US workers to be even more productive. ... Unfortunately, it's not that simple. The bottom line is what an item costs to produce, which includes labor but many other costs we'd rather ignore. For example, our draconian environmental statutes add more to production costs than does labor for many industrial operations such as chrome plating. These regulations are a major reason heavy industry has fled the U.S. Moreover, increasing per-worker productivity requires automation which costs money and itself puts people out of work. That new robomachine that allows one operator to do the work of ten not only costs big bucks, which must be added to the items it produces, but puts nine workers on the street. It may be more profitable to move to a 3rd world country than raise the capital to buy the new machine, especially if buying it means downsizing anyway. Now consider what happens when productivity becomes so high that everything is made by machines, without labor. Without jobs, nobody can buy anything and without sales there are no profits and ... |
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