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#1 | |
Franklin Pierce
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 3,695
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Quote:
I do want to make the point that in response to an increase in demand, companies can increase supply in two ways: hiring more workers or making their current workers more efficient. Historically, technology moved slow enough that increasing productivity wasn't an option but I think we are approaching the threshold where it may be cheaper (in general) for companies to increase supply by simply increasing productivity, not the amount of workers. I think this, along with technology allowing lower skilled workers to replace higher skilled workers (think manager positions), explains much of our current economic "recovery". Honestly, my generation will have to deal with a lot of problems (national debt, rising inequality, global competition, climate change), but automation and increases in productivity may be the hardest hitting since nothing else can be solved without a strong economy. Also, it seems economists have their heads in the ground and scream "neo-luddite" every time someone suggest the problem.
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#2 |
Master Dwellar
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 4,412
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