Last week we looked at how artificial intelligence (AI) was affecting the job market. I've been trying to read more widely on the subject, in an effort to understand its implications for all of us over the next few years. Jonathan Turley, well-known lawyer and legal scholar, offers these thoughts.
We are looking at one of the greatest job losses in history.
In a free-market system, such technological changes tend to offset losses with new jobs in emerging industries. And there will be such growth with the AI and robotic revolutions. But it is also likely that we are looking at a static class of unemployed and practically unemployable citizens as this new revolution unfolds.
. . .
The impact of AI is not confined to factory workers and truck drivers.
The danger is that politicians will react predictably and try to subsidize jobs that are no longer viable and industries that are being dramatically downsized. At the same time, they are likely to expand model programs in Democratic cities for universal basic or guaranteed income.
Democrats have moved forward with more than 60 bills creating such programs, and this week, Cook County, Ill. (the second-largest county in the U.S.) made permanent the universal basic income program it had originally launched with federal COVID-19 relief funds.
The problem is the creation of what I call a “kept citizenship” in a republic designed for people who are economically and politically independent from the government. That system is seriously undermined by a large percentage of citizens living off the government dole.
The solution cannot be an “arts-and-crafts” population kept entertained by government programs to learn glassblowing and pottery-making. A different type of citizen would emerge that is unlikely to be sufficiently free of the government to counter its excesses or failures.
. . .
All governments will face this existential crisis in the 21st Century. It will create growing instability globally. Although AI and robotics will make goods cheaper and more widely available, they are also likely to have a dramatic effect on populations. For example, as production costs drop with the new technology, there will be less advantage to moving factories to other countries with cheaper labor forces, such as China and Mexico.
Companies may choose to build near consumer markets to save on transportation costs while utilizing higher-skilled worker populations to maintain robotic and AI systems. That could produce massive unemployment in certain countries with low-educated, low-income populations. That in turn could destabilize governments and increase the chances of war in countries with large populations of unemployed young men.
There's more at the link. Recommended reading.
Mr. Turley outlines a very real constitutional issue for the United States. Our federal government is specifically restricted by the constitution in what, and how much, it can do - even if much of those provisions are today observed more in the breach than in the observance. Nevertheless, I think it's a valid argument that our system of government, and how we vote for it, are designed for citizens who are not dependent on that government. They are able to vote as free men and women because they are not dependents. The moment they cease being free - the moment they become financially dependent on the same government they're helping to elect - the greater becomes the danger that they will vote for their own financial advantage, rather than the good of the country. As the Roman poet Juvenal satirically pointed out almost two millennia ago, people will vote for "bread and circuses" rather than what their country needs to remain viable. The fall of Rome not too long afterwards tends to bear out his point.
So . . . if AI leads to increased unemployment (as appears likely at present), what will the newly unemployed do? Can they, on their own initiative, figure out new ways to make a living and rebuild their society? Or will they listen to the siren song of politicians who promise them all sorts of freebies and benefits in return for their vote? (For that matter, any politician who promises to set up government programs to do the hard work for people, so that they don't have to think and work for themselves, is almost guaranteed electoral success. See the universal basic income (UBI) scheme being pioneered by Chicago, and look for something similar in New York and other "blue" cities.)
The biggest threat posed by AI job replacement is one that Mr. Turley has not mentioned at all. It's simply this: if government is to provide a basic guaranteed income to every citizen, it can argue that private pension schemes, IRA's and 401(k)'s are now obsolete and unnecessary. After all, if the state will provide our needs, why do we need to make provision for them ourselves? That leads directly to the next and larger problem: what if the state decides it can confiscate or "nationalize" our pensions, because with UBI we no longer need them? There are many trillions of dollars saved by Americans in such pension systems, and a left-wing government will be frothing at the mouth over the temptation to seize them all. It would wipe out a huge chunk of our national deficit (at least until such governments spend it all again!), and can be "sold" to the underfunded portion of the electorate as a "tax on the rich" who want to "hold on to money they don't need any more". The massive population of "blue" cities and states can be expected to vote for it en masse, overwhelming the more conservative vote of those who've worked for their future income and want to keep it for themselves.
That will, in turn, beget a whole new series of arguments and confrontations over how much UBI should be, and whether "richer" people whose private pension funds were "nationalized" are entitled to a higher UBI payment as compensation, and a whole range of related issues. What if housing were folded into the UBI arrangement, so that anyone receiving UBI was also guaranteed a place to live? What quality of place? In what sort of suburb? Will everyone be forced into Cabrini-Green style housing, or will there be any freedom of choice?
I have no idea what may emerge from the current state of affairs, but I can foresee far more problems for society than are presently being discussed. In days past, laissez-faire economists used to claim that "What's good for the banks is good for the country". Well, AI may be good for business, but it may very well be "double-plus-ungood" for our jobs and for our society. Right now, we just don't know . . . and that uncertainty is dangerous in itself.
Your thoughts, dear readers?
Peter





