The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Idea seems closer than ever

- GWYNNE DYER

The First World War speeded up the emancipati­on of women; the Second World War led to the creation of welfare states in all the industrial­ized countries. What great change will the coronaviru­s crisis bring us?

This crisis has not yet killed tens of millions, and it probably never will. No great empires have fallen, and no human villain can be blamed for the problem. Yet there will probably be changes as great as those after the two world wars.

One great change will be in the pace of automation. As Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella put it, we have seen “two years’ worth of digital transforma­tion in two weeks,” as tens of millions of people stayed at home and worked online.

A great many of them will not go back to working in an office when the threat of the coronaviru­s recedes.

But for the considerab­ly larger number of people whose occupation­s do not allow them to work at home, the news is not so good. For them, the digital transforma­tion means automation and unemployme­nt. In a recent survey of company executives in 45 countries, auditors Ernst and Young found that 41 per cent of them are investing in greater automation of their work processes.

More will follow. The reason that the service industries (apart from retail sales) have largely escaped automation so far is that the new technology is expensive, disruptive and annoys the customers, not that it doesn’t exist.

But now the crisis is forcing the customers to get used to that kind of service, at the same time that the owners and managers are realizing what a nuisance it is to depend on human employees.

The process that has already destroyed the assembly lines (and given us Donald Trump) will continue through the workforce until around half the existing jobs have been destroyed, as Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne of Oxford University predicted in their famous 2013 study.

Their prediction was for the year 2033, but the coronaviru­s may be bringing that date forward.

However, the other great change wrought by the coronaviru­s works in the opposite direction.

When unemployme­nt suddenly leapt to 30 per cent as lockdowns spread across the world, we were suddenly confronted with a working model of that future – and the social and economic changes that might deal with the mass destructio­n of jobs by automation are actually being road-tested right now.

In some countries, like the United States, it is real unemployme­nt, only slightly alleviated by hand-outs like a $1,200 cheque signed by Trump.

In most richer countries, it is some form of ‘furlough’, with the government paying 75-85 per cent of people’s wages, up to a limit that is high enough to let them live in modest comfort, until their jobs resume in two or three or four months’ time.

It’s a small step from there to the concept of a guaranteed basic income as the long-term solution for a society where half the jobs have been destroyed by automation but productivi­ty is higher than ever.

There are, of course, a number of codicils to this conclusion. The current levels of income support could not be sustained long-term without a significan­tly higher rate of tax. Widespread job-sharing would be needed to avoid creating a permanent underclass of the unemployed and to keep people connected. There are no magic bullets.

We were already sleepwalki­ng towards this level of unemployme­nt anyway, just over a much longer period. At least now we’re awake to the fact that such things can happen, and we know that they can be managed.

More or less normal service will probably be resumed in a few months, or at worst in a year or so, but automation is getting a big boost and from now on it will be an ever-present companion. But the experience we are going through right now makes it a lot less scary. Gwynne Dyer’s new book is ‘Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work)’

 ?? 123RF STOCK ?? Many people were forced to work from home after the coronaviru­s (COVID-19 strain) pandemic arrived in Canada.
123RF STOCK Many people were forced to work from home after the coronaviru­s (COVID-19 strain) pandemic arrived in Canada.
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