A world without work Technology, automation, and how we should respond

Daniel Susskind

Book - 2020

"A down-and-out so-and-so gets more than he bargained for when a wave of automation sweeps him and his kind out to an oil-black, petroleum-stink sea of indolent excess and the promise of A WORLD WITHOUT WORK"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

331.25/Susskind
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 331.25/Susskind Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt and Company 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Daniel Susskind (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 305 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781250173515
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Context
  • 1. A History of Misplaced Anxiety
  • 2. The Age of Labor
  • 3. The Pragmatist Revolution
  • 4. Underestimating Machines
  • Part II. The Threat
  • 5. Task Encroachment
  • 6. Frictional Technological Unemployment
  • 7. Structural Technological Unemployment
  • 8. Technology and Inequality
  • Part III. The Response
  • 9. Education and Its Limits
  • 10. The Big State
  • 11. Big Tech
  • 12. Meaning and Purpose
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

A former policy advisor for the British government, Susskind (Univ. of Oxford, UK) lays out a case for continued advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) that would radically disrupt the labor market and result in significantly less work for humans. Susskind argues that the number of jobs that cannot be accomplished by AI is much smaller than economists have traditionally thought, and he provides a comprehensive history of AI and points to recent AI advances like AlphaGo. He argues that technology could evolve in unexpected ways, and that AI could become a powerful tool for solving problems in ways that are unfamiliar to humans and do not rely on anything resembling human cognition. Susskind also provides an excellent analysis of how technology has affected the labor market in the past, resulting in the creation of new types of jobs. However, he points out that the future result could be different due to evolving social and technological trends. In the last section of the book the author offers recommendations on how to deal with problems of mass unemployment, among these ideas universal basic income, taxation, and government oversight of technology. Though Susskind's argument and conclusions are a minority opinion, the possibilities he sets forth should not be overlooked. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals. --Sammy Joe Chapman, Purdue University Northwest

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

The theory that there will always be jobs that humans are more adept at than machines is based on AI fueled by human input. The AlphaZero system, however, can easily teach itself, within hours, a game such as chess and how to consistently beat humans or other machines. Such bottoms-up computation doesn't solve in human terms, making the nature of the human mind irrelevant to building computers that exceed human capability. Even job fields once thought safe from automation because they rely on tacit knowledge that is hard to explain are increasingly vulnerable to AI. For a world short on paid work, Oxford economist Susskind advocates a conditional basic income to avoid inequality and provide nonworkers with ways to contribute to society. He also predicts that the worrisome power of tech companies will be political, not economic, and will merit a Political Power Oversight Authority based on moral philosophy. The lives of nonworkers may lose purpose and meaning, so governments must rethink leisure and education. Susskind's book is so timely, to miss it might be downright irresponsible.--Dane Carr Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A thorough and sobering look at automation and the depreciation of human labor arrives from Oxford economics fellow Susskind (The Future of the Professions, coauthor). It turns on an important question: will there be enough work to employ people throughout the 21st century? Sorry but no, Susskind concludes; machines can't do everything, but they can do much more than they're doing currently, and will inevitably displace many more workers. He isn't in despair, however, as he has some possible remedies in mind. Before dispensing them, he briskly covers the rise of artificial intelligence, the social problems raised by economic inequality, and the efficacy of education for protecting economically insecure workers, which he finds more limited than optimists would have people think. Susskind then posits what he believes are more effective long-term responses, including increased government intervention into the free market, targeted tax incentives for employers, and strengthened regulation aimed at changing the behavior of big technology companies. This dense but lively investigation is not for the reader who wants an easy dinner-party answer, but the curious worrier or the skeptic who wants to understand the theory behind the machines will want to take a look. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A report on how robotic automation is displacing the need for human workers. Oxford University economics fellow Susskind (co-author: The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts, 2016) spent nearly a decade researching how the rise of mechanical manufacturing, computerized production, and artificial intelligence is directly and unstoppably affecting the human workforce. He delivers a worst-case scenario in the form of an update on the economic and workforce landscape upheaval that has been in motion for decades thanks to a steep uptick in the integration of robotic production and AI. Sometimes densely academic, Susskind's pragmatic narrative is bolstered by statistical charts and graphs supporting his theories. The author diligently explains the history of these replacement technologies, the patterns they followed, and why their impacts on the giants of industry should be taken seriously. The threat of "technological unemployment" is very real, he writes, and the problems it creates will consist of increased outperformance by automated workers and a subsequent dwindling array of tasks that could be considered human-specific. Susskind also addresses the growing problem of economic inequality by way of the disparity between power-hungry, financially astute "supermanagers" (so named by economist Thomas Piketty) and stagnant workers with lower-paying jobs. Thankfully, the author doesn't deliver this grim prognosis without a proactive response or hints at how a complementary workforce fueling economic stabilization could be achieved in the long term. He posits a multitiered approach involving new skills-based education for laborers, increased regulatory control over larger technology companies, the introduction of a "robot tax," and financial incentives for employers using a sizable manual labor force. Susskind's economic perspective makes the conundrum crystal clear, and he makes a convincing and illuminating argument to decelerate the onset of global "automation anxiety."A complex yet lucid and surprisingly optimistic account from the frontlines of technology addressing the challenges facing the human workforce. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.