'The man who wants to take your jobs'
Josh Pollak
pardsbane at offthehill.org
Tue Mar 23 16:26:26 EST 2004
On Mar 23, 2004, at 2:48 PM, John Chambers wrote:
> I've seen another cute parallel that illustrates one of the problems
> we're facing. Some economists have pointed out that, according to the
> standard definitions of "productivity" that we use today, the early
> decades of the 1900's saw a huge increase in the productivity of
> horses. That is, the amount of work divided by the number of horses
> at work went up very rapidly.
>
> Did this benefit the horses? Well, not exactly ...
>
> This was an intro to the suggestion that what we're starting to see
> is a similar huge increase of productivity in humans. That is, the
> ratio of goods produced to human workers is going up rapidly. Will
> humans benefit? Probably no more than the horses did a centry ago,
> and for the same reason.
Evidence of this happening is already present, read 'Nickel And Dimed:
On (not) Getting By In America", by Barbara Ehrenreich,
(http://www.nickelanddimed.net/), where she details how corporations
demand more and more 'productivity' out of fewer and fewer workers.
Because we have a glut of workers and fewer jobs, companies can afford
to physically burn and wear out employees, since they are so easy to
replace.
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