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Aaron Benanav ─ Automation and the Future of Work 

Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs
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Aaron Benanav will join the Rhodes Center to discuss his new book, Automation and the Future of Work.
A consensus-shattering account of automation technologies and their effect on workplaces and the labor market Silicon Valley titans, politicians, techno-futurists and social critics have united in arguing that we are living on the cusp of an era of rapid technological automation, heralding the end of work as we know it. But does the much-discussed “rise of the robots” really explain the jobs crisis that awaits us on the other side of the coronavirus? Aaron Benanav uncovers the structural economic trends that will shape our working lives far into the future. What social movements, he asks, are required to propel us into post-scarcity, if technological innovation alone can’t deliver it? In response to calls for a universal basic income that would maintain a growing army of redundant workers, he offers a counter-proposal.
Aaron Benanav is an economic historian and social theorist. Currently, he holds a postdoctoral researcher position at Humboldt University of Berlin and is the academic coordinator for the research unit “Re-Allocation” in the Cluster of Excellence “SCRIPTS: Contestations of the Liberal Script,” a seven-year project funded by the German Research Foundation. Benanav also serves as an editorial board member for the journal International Labor and Working Class History.
Benanav’s research interests include nineteenth- and twentieth-century global economic history, economic development, labor market dynamics, unemployment, and inequality. His first book, "Automation and the Future of Work," appeared with Verso Books in November 2020. He is working on a second book project on the global history of unemployment since World War II. Before joining Humboldt, Benanav was a Harper-Schmidt Fellow in the Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. He holds a PhD and an MA in History from the University of California, Los Angeles, and a BA in History from the University of Chicago.

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31 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 16   
@nobody_8_1
@nobody_8_1 3 года назад
Brilliant. I am going to re-watch this. I'd love to read this book. I think it would be intrinsically insightful.
@davidwilkie9551
@davidwilkie9551 3 года назад
Good observation of the actual cause-effect of AI and Robotics. The Economy is not inherently designed for machines, they're always used to extend Human resources.
@aitortilla721
@aitortilla721 3 года назад
in the description it says something about a post-scarcity era. I'm not sure what it's supposed to mean, because it seems that we are arriving at a scarcity time, in both energy sources and raw materials.
@lucianomoffatt2672
@lucianomoffatt2672 3 года назад
34:42 both Italy and even more France provides more Employment protection to temporary contracts! Is that right? Can somebody elaborate?
@barrynichols2846
@barrynichols2846 3 года назад
In "automated testing" their is a shit ton of manual work, and then modification every time something changes
@msrr1303
@msrr1303 Год назад
Human beings became the dominant species thanks to intelligence and our ability to adapt. What we’ve accomplished throughout millions of years is wild. Along the way and Automation and robotics will increase employment. Mainly for compliance and regulation, ensuring AI perform tasks accordingly. Low skilled jobs have an inherently flaw, which is human error. A good example is Amazon picking. Say an employee with a pallet jack knocked over an employe and results in skull fracture. That This is a game of capital and resource allocation.
@UBIAICOSMOS
@UBIAICOSMOS 3 года назад
Technology is cheaper than workers. it's Time for a #BasicIncome & #FourDayWorkWeek
@redcoltken
@redcoltken 3 года назад
Kinda utopian - but the logic feels solid
@huberttiddlywinks1445
@huberttiddlywinks1445 3 года назад
24:10 - What?? This is nonsense. Productivity has increased significantly with higher processor speeds and while it's not 1:1 ratio between clock speeds and computer count there are many industries that have been revolutionized with the advent of faster CPUs and GPUs. Just look at the fields of AI, rendering, video editing, film production, scientific computing that once required multiple distributed systems now can be performed by a single person on a modern desktop machine. To say so otherwise is extremely ignorant of technology.
@huberttiddlywinks1445
@huberttiddlywinks1445 3 года назад
"Let me just ignore any datapoint that doesn't confirm my hypothesis"
@johnmalkovich4042
@johnmalkovich4042 3 года назад
@Hubert Tiddlywinks, I agree. What is more, the author presents a graph at the beginning of the talk which shows high productivity growth over time and then goes on to argue there is no productivity growth. Really bizzare.
@Brewmaster757
@Brewmaster757 3 года назад
He's talking about the rate of productivity growth; not the growth of productivity as such. Of course productivity has grown, but the rate of its growth is slowing down.
@mrzack888
@mrzack888 2 года назад
he talked a lot about nothing.
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