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posted by janrinok on Monday January 02 2017, @11:56PM   Printer-friendly
from the employees-will-now-lead-lives-of-leisure dept.

Foxconn, the Chinese manufacturer of Apple's iPhones and other electronic devices, aims to replace human workers with "FoxBots" and achieve nearly full automation of entire factories:

The slow and steady march of manufacturing automation has been in place at Foxconn for years. The company said last year that it had set a benchmark of 30 percent automation at its Chinese factories by 2020. The company can now produce around 10,000 Foxbots a year, Jia-peng says, all of which can be used to replace human labor. In March, Foxconn said it had automated away 60,000 jobs at one of its factories.

[...] Complicating the matter is the Chinese government, which has incentivized human employment in the country. In areas like Chengdu, Shenzhen, and Zhengzhou, local governments have doled out billions of dollars in bonuses, energy contracts, and public infrastructure to Foxconn to allow the company to expand. As of last year, Foxconn employed as many as 1.2 million people, making it one of the largest employers in the world. More than 1 million of those workers reside in China, often at elaborate, city-like campuses that house and feed employees.

In an in-depth report published yesterday, The New York Times detailed these government incentivizes for Foxconn's Zhengzhou factory, its largest and most capable plant that produces 500,000 iPhones a day and is known locally as "iPhone City." According to Foxconn's Jia-peng, the Zhengzhou factory has some production lines already at the second automation phase and on track to become fully automated in a few years' time. So it may not be long before one of China's largest employers will be forced to grapple with its automation ambitions and the benefits it receives to transform rural parts of the country into industrial powerhouses.

To undermine American manufacturing, ditch the meatbags.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday January 04 2017, @12:13AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday January 04 2017, @12:13AM (#449152) Journal

    The automation makes some more jobs viable by reducing the value of human labor.

    Automation never makes human labor less valuable.

    However, since there is a limit to the demand for iphones, as you increase output the sale price goes down.

    Even Foxconn does other things than just make iPhones.

    Also since there are fewer jobs to go around there is more competition for those jobs and the wage can be reduced.

    You do realize that hasn't happened yet? Globally, wages [voxeu.org] have been on the rise. I'll note that there's reason to expect humans to work for gain far in the future. First, we have comparative advantage and Jevons paradox from economics. Second, people don't stop working and trading just because they're ostracized from the general economy. There's a fair number of examples of businesses and such which operate outside the normal economy. Some of these employ large numbers of disfranchised people (such as urban gangs).