{"id":12565,"date":"2019-07-19T09:00:14","date_gmt":"2019-07-19T13:00:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=12565"},"modified":"2022-10-09T07:28:58","modified_gmt":"2022-10-09T11:28:58","slug":"could-automated-jobs-increase-homelessness","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/could-automated-jobs-increase-homelessness\/","title":{"rendered":"Could Automated Jobs Increase Homelessness?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Nobody can predict the future. Many have tried and failed. But for the world at large in 2019, we needn\u2019t hassle ourselves with educated guesses or calculated estimations regarding what might exist beyond our scopes.<\/p>\n

We needn\u2019t attempt to predict the future at all, because we are already living in it…<\/h4>\n

Just yesterday, while wondering down the abandoned aisles of my local grocery store, I came face to face with an ominous looking employee who stared me down with synthetic eyes and a painted smile that immediately conjured images of Chuckie. The silent creature followed me, expressionless, with wheels for feet. I\u2019m not sure if I was being helped or monitored. All I know is that the very presence of the thing put me on edge and I left the aisle expeditiously, with my toddler in the background saying, \u201cMommy what\u2019s wrong?\u201d<\/p>\n

I headed to the checkout lanes. Each light at the end of each long rotating conveyor belt was off except one. It blinked red. The lady at the register looked up at me momentarily. I returned her glance. Our fleeting moment of human contact was immediately severed. She turned her blinking red light off almost instinctively. The lady and the light faded into the void like all the rest. Again, I was alone. Just me, my daughter, and the chugging machinery.<\/p>\n

I placed my basket down at the self-checkout counter.<\/h4>\n

After a few minutes of ringing myself up, I was ordered to remove an item from the bagging area. I wondered which item I was meant to remove but there was nobody around to ask. I removed my keys. The machine was not satisfied. I removed my bags. Still, this was incorrect. Eventually, I was forced to remove everything and start the ringing all over again. When the beeping and chugging subsided, I inserted my debit card chip first and waited while the self-checkout machine rifled through my bank account history, learning where I go for coffee, what I order in restaurants, which hotels I stay at on vacation, and more in a matter of instants. The green box flashed the word \u201cApproved\u201d and my receipt shot out of a slot in the bottom. But I\u2019m not so certain I do approve.<\/p>\n

I looked around and wondered where the workers were, where the shoppers went, where the other human beings might have gone. Lately, I don\u2019t just wonder this at the market. Similar questions enter my mind when I arrive at the bank, when I stroll through the ruins of what\u2019s left of America\u2019s shopping malls, and even when I find myself shuffling digital items into virtual shopping carts on Amazon, a company that paid zero dollars<\/a> in federal taxes on an $11.2 billion profit recently. That sounds like a separate issue, but it isn\u2019t. All of these factors are contributing to the world around us, to this futuristic place we live in but don\u2019t believe really exists.<\/p>\n

Like It or Not, Automated Jobs Are Already a Part of Our Lives. The Question is, What, if any, Impact Do they Have on Homelessness?<\/h4>\n

According to Forbes Magazine<\/a>, we\u2019ve already witnessed the loss of millions of jobs to Artificial Intelligence. To be more exact, approximately seven million Americans were put out of work due to automation over the course of a five-year span.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n

One would think that many of these lost jobs were replaceable. But statistics shatter that theory, showing instead a permanent wage reduction for these specific types of employees. That loss of wage isn\u2019t insignificant either. Right now, it stands firm at a dramatic 17-30% drop. Anyone who\u2019s lost 30% of their wages to the recession knows how difficult it is to live so far below the minimum you\u2019ve come accustomed to. In other situations, wage reductions are temporary hardships. But in this case the wages are unlikely to ever return to their original bottom line. The end result is quite devastating indeed, causing marital problems, housing issues, and lower school performance for the children of laid-off workers.<\/p>\n

Researchers Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne conducted an Oxford study<\/a> that projected an estimated 47% job loss due to automated systems looming in the very near future. It is well known amongst advocates for social justice that wages have decreased while rents have reached all-time highs. A 47% job loss could certainly serve a detrimental blow to the ever-growing rent burdened population, many of whom fit the description of people who are likely to lose their jobs to machines. Henceforth, displacing workers from their stations of employment would inevitably lead to displacing these same workers from their very homes, their stations in life, so to speak. However, it doesn\u2019t have to.<\/p>\n

While Jobs Are Being Lost, New Jobs are Being Created. But is this Enough to Fill the Void?<\/h4>\n

The question then arises as to whether new age jobs like blogging, vlogging, and bitcoin, etc., jobs that didn\u2019t exist 10 years ago, are growing at the same rate as automated jobs. Unfortunately, data related to this subject matter is significantly lacking mostly because such occupations are too new to withstand analytical comparison. What we do know is that these pesky robots have created quite a few new occupational ventures that are either already here or well on the way. Some of the most popular include:<\/p>\n