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by 0815test
2577 days ago
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That majority of work only accounts for a small portion of value on the margin. You could reduce that work quite a bit with very little overall effect. In fact, this could even increase total product since the unskilled do tend to be heavily liquidity- and risk-constrained, so freeing up some time and effort on their part (without the stress of involuntary unemployment!) would significantly incent them to do such things as retraining, starting businesses, entering formal education etc. etc. This is a major argument for UBI, in fact - which would work a lot better than cutting working time across the board by fiat! |
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No, the surpluses yielded by consumers and profits by companies of those people 'doing the work' is vast.
If they stopped doing it it would be a nightmare.
We don't need resto servers to get English degrees, and then what, exactly? We need someone to do the resto serving.
If they 'start their own business', like 'a restaurant' ... well then they're still going to need servers!
If anything, wages could be increased for that cohort. Surely there's some opportunity for automation, but even then we still need people to do the work.
We all like the idea of 'education' and that everyone should have an opportunity for it, but there's simply quite a bit of work to be done, we should think about how to make it work better for everyone.