Automation may mean a post-work society but we shouldn't be afraid

To benefit from the automation revolution we need a universal basic income, the slashing of working hours and a redefinition of ourselves without work

When researchers Frey and Osborne predicted in 2013 that 47% of US jobs were susceptible to automation by 2050, they set off a wave of dystopian concern. But the key word is “susceptible”.

The automation revolution is possible, but without a radical change in the social conventions surrounding work it will not happen. The real dystopia is that, fearing the mass unemployment and psychological aimlessness it might bring, we stall the third industrial revolution. Instead we end up creating millions of low skilled jobs that do not need to exist.

A low-work society is only a dystopia if the social system is geared to distributing rewards via work

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via Automation may mean a post-work society but we shouldn't be afraid

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