I’m
just a normal guy living a normal life in a normal city on planet earth in the
22nd century. They told us robots would take our jobs, and they
have, thank god. Now I can spend the day in a meaningful way rather than drudge
at life to eke out a living like my grandfather had to do. He was a
factory worker, but then again so am I.
Gramps
worked 8-10 hours a day tightening wheel nuts in an auto factory and barely
made enough to feed his family let alone buy a home or take a decent vacation.
Then the robots came and took his job. Life went from bad to worse until his
former employer opted into the Robot Minimum Wage Plan (RMWP) to save money on
their robot budget and expand production.
Now,
the company hires robots from XYZ Robot Installation Company. They pay an
hourly wage for each robot they hire depending on the complexity of the task
the robot performs. The wage is fairly low to the company but since the robots
work 24/7 it adds up. The robots pay income tax and the company pays payroll
tax just like they always did. In addition though, a percentage of the wage
goes into the RMWP.
The
RMWP collects money from all of the working robots and distributes it to humans
as a minimum wage. As a descendent of a displaced worker, I am eligible to
receive the wage. The goal is for everyone to eventually receive the wage and
as more and more robots get to work that is coming about.
While
I could live on the wage at a subsistence level, I choose to work in the
factory 3 days a week in order to improve my living conditions and lifestyle.
Most human jobs are part time like mine so there are plenty of jobs to go
around and with the RMWP the wages required are lower so companies and
institutions tend to hire more people.
I’m
happy because I work 3 days a week and live a comfortable life.
My
friend and his wife choose to work 5 days a week and live in a nicer house and
send their kids to private school. My spouse works at their daycare 3 days per
week.
I
have other highly successful friends who work in the robot industry …
designing, building, installing and operating robots.
Nobody
that I know works in a repetitive dirty job … the robots do that work.
People
who are unable to work get their RMWP plus government disability assistance.
People
who choose not to work get RMWP and can survive on that although we still need
to work on trying to educate and motivate them. The abundance of clean part
time jobs is helping with that.
The
capitalist system still thrives. The best investments have turned out to be in
Robot manufacturers, installers and servicing companies. Providing basic food
and shelter has also proven to be a good investment since homelessness has all
but disappeared.
The
government is happy because they get taxes from robots.
Even
bankers are happy because 100% of the population are consumers because they
have money to spend.
Putting
numbers together - this is a simple starting point open to modification and it
represents only one segment … Industrial Robotics.
Average
cost of an industrial robot system today is $100000 (Incl. installation &
control system)
Robot
wage - $25000 / yr
Taxes
– 15% = $3750
RMWP
contribution – 25% = $6250 ()
To
Robot Integrator (Supply & install Robot) - 60% = $15000
RMWP
payment required to support one adult = $10000
Please
take a moment and comment with your impressions of this scenario. Could it work?
I’d appreciate 2 points of view. Your first impressions and thoughts (positive
or negative) followed by the opposite argument. If the first impression is
positive (this could work because) then the second should be a rebuttal to the
first (this will never work because).
If you're new please have a look at this Introduction before commenting.
If you're new please have a look at this Introduction before commenting.
I think another important topic that will come up as we move forward is "what is a robot?" How will we define what machine and former operator would be deserving of this wage. I imagine every manufacturer would be looking for loopholes to avoid paying any taxes or wages so this would be difficult to regulate. A robot security guard might be an easy one to define, but what about factory automation where sensors and cameras do the sorting and quality control where humans previously worked?
ReplyDeleteI'm a robot software guy so I'm pushing for more robots but I do think Gates is partially right. The tax code punishes a company for hiring a worker rather than buying a piece of capital equipment. Make Humans an asset you carry on the books, that way if the human out preforms the robot, at least they won't be at a tax disadvantage.
ReplyDeleteEven better use robots and humans together like we do at Jodone (shameless plug)