The Automation Revolution is Upon Us

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How will people respond to artificial intelligence taking their jobs? The rise of political radicalism on both Left and Right in the early twenty-first century is in part a reaction to rising income inequality and slower wage growth despite the increasing automation of jobs and gains in productive efficiency. We are in an ‘Engels pause,’ the lag between new technology that benefits whole economies and the moment those gains filter down to the families of displaced workers. Something similar happened during the industrial revolution during the 19th century, the moment that birthed Marxism. Paul interviews economic historian Carl Frey to discuss what we can learn about our present moment of technological innovation and the social reaction to it from the history of industrialization.What is the technology trap? Why didn’t the industrial revolution happen earlier? Who are the beneficiaries of technological progress? Can algorithms be creative? What is the difference between originality and creativity?Further Reading:The Technology Trap: Capital, Labor, and the Power in the Age of Automation, written by Carl Benefikt FreyEngel’s Pause: A Pessimist’s Guide to the British Industrial Revolution, written by Robert Allen and Robert C. AllenCapital in the Twenty-First Century, written by Thomas PikettyRelated Content:Industrial Revolution, written by Deirdre McCloskeyWill Artificial Intelligence Take Your Job?, Building Tomorrow PodcastWill Algorithms Replace the Price System?, written by Adam Gurri Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Automation Revolution is Upon Us

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The Automation Revolution is Upon Us
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