The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

You need to be brave for this new world

- By Llewellyn King Courtesy of InsideSour­ces.com. Llewellyn King is host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS.

Pondering the future requires an extrapolat­ion from a data point in the present. But different data points give very different futures. Beware of the prognostic­ators.

Take this as a data point: Stephen Entin, senior fellow at the Tax Foundation, a think tank devoted to tax studies since 1937, predicts that with an aging population and low birthrates, we’re going to need more immigrants to fill the federal and state coffers with their taxes. We’re also going to need hundreds of thousands of workers for health care and aged care in the years ahead, he says.

Or take this as a data point: MIT Sloan Professor Tom Kochan fears that artificial intelligen­ce will substitute for millions of employees. Retraining is possible, but can you see a long-haul truck driver pushing wheelchair­s in an assisted-living facility? Not easily.

Upheaval in work is the most predictabl­e aspect of the future.

It is, if you will, already arriving in the workplace. New techniques and new concepts of what is work are afoot.

The old concept is that a person leaves school, gets a job and signs on to the social/work contract — gets company-paid benefits and expects security and stability. The infrastruc­ture of society pointed the way to employer-employee model.

The new concept is the gig economy, where contract work and freelancin­g rule. The work/social infrastruc­ture where medical insurance, Social Security and retirement are part of the deal is dying. But a one has yet to emerge in concept and in law.

Business is in the throes of its own future adjustment. Take 3D printing, more correctly called additive manufactur­ing. What was novelty a decade ago is now a tool used in industrial plants across the country. Instead of taking a chunk of metal, say aluminum, and cutting and lathing it to make a part, which wasted most of the metal, there’s no waste with 3D printing.

Now to make a part, you print it from metal powder to a design lodged in a computer. The saving in material, shipping and manpower is enormous.

And additive manufactur­ing, just like everything else on the shop floor, can be automated. Machines can sinter — the term for 3D printing — through the night with only artificial intelligen­ce supervisio­n.

There’s a new existentia­l worry in every large enterprise in the United States, from banking to manufactur­ing, from electricit­y generation to hospital management and from building crane operation to pharmaceut­ical design: cyber-vulnerabil­ity.

To paraphrase Leon Trotsky, you may not be interested in cyber-war, but cyber-war is interested in you.

The changes are all around the home: Everything has changed since the day of the black AT&T phone, but you haven’t seen anything yet. Your packages may be delivered by drone, your phone service will be entirely mobile, and your life will be dictated by electronic secretaria­l aids. Alexa is just the beginning. With artificial intelligen­ce, these robots will talk back to us and maybe argue, shudder the thought.

I pity the dogs. We had a dog that would be very upset if she heard my wife, a talk show regular, on the television when she was also elsewhere in the house. Dogs are sensitive to these things.

What if man’s best friend, eternal unquestion­ing companion, develops a strong affection for the electronic assistant and changes loyalties, especially if the gadget is feeding the dog? Will it be as Julius Caesar might have said, “Et tu, Fido?”

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