The End of Work

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Ex-California
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The End of Work

Post by Ex-California » Sun Dec 11, 2016 8:54 am

https://aeon.co/essays/what-if-jobs-are ... he-problem
Of course, you will say – along with every economist from Dean Baker to Greg Mankiw, Left to Right – that raising taxes on corporate income is a disincentive to investment and thus job creation. Or that it will drive corporations overseas, where taxes are lower.

But in fact raising taxes on corporate income can’t have these effects.

Let’s work backward. Corporations have been ‘multinational’ for quite some time. In the 1970s and ’80s, before Ronald Reagan’s signature tax cuts took effect, approximately 60 per cent of manufactured imported goods were produced offshore, overseas, by US companies. That percentage has risen since then, but not by much.

Chinese workers aren’t the problem – the homeless, aimless idiocy of corporate accounting is. That is why the Citizens United decision of 2010 applying freedom of speech regulations to campaign spending is hilarious. Money isn’t speech, any more than noise is. The Supreme Court has conjured a living being, a new person, from the remains of the common law, creating a real world more frightening than its cinematic equivalent: say, Frankenstein, Blade Runner or, more recently, Transformers.

But the bottom line is this. Most jobs aren’t created by private, corporate investment, so raising taxes on corporate income won’t affect employment. You heard me right. Since the 1920s, economic growth has happened even though net private investment has atrophied. What does that mean? It means that profits are pointless except as a way of announcing to your stockholders (and hostile takeover specialists) that your company is a going concern, a thriving business. You don’t need profits to ‘reinvest’, to finance the expansion of your company’s workforce or output, as the recent history of Apple and most other corporations has amply demonstrated.


So investment decisions by CEOs have only a marginal effect on employment. Taxing the profits of corporations to finance a welfare state that permits us to love our neighbours and to be our brothers’ keeper is not an economic problem. It’s something else – it’s an intellectual issue, a moral conundrum.

and
When I see, for example, that you’re making millions by laundering drug-cartel money (HSBC), or pushing bad paper on mutual fund managers (AIG, Bear Stearns, Morgan Stanley, Citibank), or preying on low-income borrowers (Bank of America), or buying votes in Congress (all of the above) – just business as usual on Wall Street – while I’m barely making ends meet from the earnings of my full-time job, I realise that my participation in the labour market is irrational. I know that building my character through work is stupid because crime pays. I might as well become a gangster like you.

That’s why an economic crisis such as the Great Recession is also a moral problem, a spiritual impasse – and an intellectual opportunity. We’ve placed so many bets on the social, cultural and ethical import of work that when the labour market fails, as it so spectacularly has, we’re at a loss to explain what happened, or to orient ourselves to a different set of meanings for work and for markets.
and

Adherence to the principle of productivity therefore threatens public health as well as the planet (actually, these are the same thing). By committing us to what is impossible, it makes for madness. The Nobel Prize-winning economist Angus Deaton said something like this when he explained anomalous mortality rates among white people in the Bible Belt by claiming that they’ve ‘lost the narrative of their lives’ – by suggesting that they’ve lost faith in the American Dream. For them, the work ethic is a death sentence because they can’t live by it.

So the impending end of work raises the most fundamental questions about what it means to be human. To begin with, what purposes could we choose if the job – economic necessity – didn’t consume most of our waking hours and creative energies? What evident yet unknown possibilities would then appear? How would human nature itself change as the ancient, aristocratic privilege of leisure becomes the birthright of human beings as such?
I think that all are amazing points, but part of the problem is the thread of Protestantism that still runs through our culture that places a moral value on hard work. Hell, it even runs further back to Catholicism where suffering is grace.
No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session

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Cid
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Re: The End of Work

Post by Cid » Sun Dec 11, 2016 10:46 am

I think suffering and joy are inevitable work or no. Work is about purpose, and you can re-purpose that. Advancements in AI regardless, there's no easier way to create solutions for reality than to raise smart kids and impart to them a feeling of grandeur in this world so they can make it more beautiful. Sometimes that looks like people reading Marcus Aurelius after finishing a shift as a welder, sometimes that means cooking grub for your family after working on spreadsheets for 5 hours.

Allowing people to have choices animates the dead world, and our institutions need to make sure individuals have choices to make. A lot of frustration that both the left and right have is they feel cut off from having meaningful actions. Unemployment, social backlash, political impotency, etc. Do enough of that for long enough and people are going to want a war just to shock the system and create the highs and lows which shake the entropy concrete off of society. That's terrifying, the security of stability is the most natural thing for humans to cling to (myself included here), but humanity is supranatural. Eventually we will make decisions that are not natural because regardless of what hippies think we have too much brain mass to not do so. Our natural is just the path of least resistance, but we are more than capable of damming all paths off until something cracks.

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SuburbanFarmer
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Re: The End of Work

Post by SuburbanFarmer » Fri Dec 16, 2016 1:45 pm

That is a fucking great article. Good find, man.
Which is to say that everybody has doubled down on the benefits of work just as it reaches a vanishing point. Securing ‘full employment’ has become a bipartisan goal at the very moment it has become both impossible and unnecessary. Sort of like securing slavery in the 1850s or segregation in the 1950s.
SJWs are a natural consequence of corporatism.

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