WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The
Future of Work
We are living through
a new economic revolution that will challenge existing economic and social
thinking.
Roughly 150 years
ago, the Industrial Revolution swept the world, sparking major increases in
wealth and productivity. But it also wrought huge social changes, as
agricultural workers made the painful transition to factory work and city life.
Today, we are living
through a new revolution, and whether you call it the digital revolution or the
Artificial Intelligence Age, it’s likely to transform our lives totally.
Artificial
intelligence and technology will have a huge impact on the way we work and,
possibly, on whether we work at all. According to Kevin Kelly, founding editor
of Wired magazine, 65 percent of the jobs out there today won’t exist in the
next ten to 15 years. Whether you’re a laborer or a lawyer, a tailor or a
translator, the current wave of automation threatens your livelihood.
Now, history is full
of people worrying about technology taking away jobs, and yet most of us are
still employed. In nineteenth-century Britain, a group of textile workers
called the Luddites protested new manufacturing techniques for taking away
their jobs. But what those techniques really led to was seamstresses gaining
new skills and jobs and textile costs coming down. Sure, there was some
short-term pain. But technology created new roles just as it destroyed old ones,
and it made everyone richer in the long run.
In the new age of
artificial-intelligence-powered growth, though, the results of growth may not
be shared equally.
Consider the
difference between two hugely successful businesses, Instagram and Kodak. When
Kodak was at its peak, it provided a livelihood for 145,000 people and their
families. By contrast, when Facebook acquired Instagram for USD$12 billion in
2012, Instagram had just 12 employees in total. And Instagram isn’t unique; two
years later, Facebook paid USD$19 billion for Whatsapp, which had 400 million
users but only 55 employees.
So, it’s possible
that the lessons of the past will no longer apply in the future. Our current
economic revolution could lead to far more Instagrams and far fewer Kodaks. Consequently,
we might see a growing gulf between a tiny but super-rich elite and an
increasingly jobless middle class.
To deal with these
problems, we need to consider new ideas. Like universal basic income, for
example, which the state would use to provide all citizens with enough money on
which to live. If our governments can respond to these challenges
intelligently, then we may all benefit; if they get it wrong, we face a
difficult road ahead.
Please leave your
thoughts and opinions in the comments box provided below.
Olusola Bodunrin is a graduate of Philosophy
from the University of Ado-Ekiti. He is a professional writer, he writes
articles for publication and he anchors – ‘What You Should Know’ on
SHEGZSABLEZS’ blog.
‘What You Should Know’ is a column that offers to
educate and enlighten the public on general falsehood and myths.


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