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posted by janrinok on Monday October 17 2016, @09:28AM   Printer-friendly
from the where's-the-good-news? dept.

The technology revolution has delivered Google searches, Facebook friends, iPhone apps, Twitter rants and shopping for almost anything on Amazon, all in the past decade and a half.

What it hasn't delivered are many jobs. Google's Alphabet Inc. and Facebook Inc. had at the end of last year a total of 74,505 employees, about one-third fewer than Microsoft Corp. even though their combined stock-market value is twice as big. Photo-sharing service Instagram had 13 employees when it was acquired for $1 billion by Facebook in 2012.

Hiring in the computer and chip sectors dove after companies shifted hardware production outside the U.S., and the newest tech giants needed relatively few workers. The number of technology startups fizzled. Growth in productivity and wages slowed, and income inequality rose as machines replaced routine, low- and middle-income, human-powered work.

This outcome is a far cry from what many political leaders, tech entrepreneurs and economists predicted about a generation ago. In 2000, President Bill Clinton said in his last State of the Union address: "America will lead the world toward shared peace and prosperity and the far frontiers of science and technology." His economic team trumpeted "the ferment of rapid technological change" as one of the U.S. economy's "principal engines" of growth.

The gap between what the tech boom promised and then delivered is another source of the rumbling national discontent that powered the rise this year of political outsiders Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders.

[...]

Eventually there'll be only decent jobs for maybe 20% of the population:  What economic system is needed for that??


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  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Tuesday October 18 2016, @02:43AM

    by Thexalon (636) on Tuesday October 18 2016, @02:43AM (#415508)

    No inflation (even deflation) is a good thing for many in the population. We're stuck with continual inflation purely for support of the banking system (fractional reserve banking) and the welfare state (increasing revenues).

    Total and utter nonsense.

    The only person who is actually harmed by inflation is somebody who is hanging onto cash rather than investing it in something. And by something, I mean almost anything that is likely to appreciate in value: stocks, bonds, treasury bonds and other sovereign debt, real estate, gold, Magic cards, whatever. And that's what inflation pushes you to do, which good for the economy as a whole because it means rich people are putting their money to use rather than simply hoarding it.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
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