麻豆果冻传媒

In Short

Findings of Shift: The Commission on Work, Workers, and Technology

2015-review-our-year-in-policy-papers_image.jpeg

The future of work is already here in the present.

After a year of imagining the future of work 10鈥20 years from now, led by (national think tank) 麻豆果冻传媒 and (technology company) Bloomberg, and powered by discussions with more than 100 leaders across all walks of American life, a survey of American workers, conversations about automated trucks with truckers, discussions with people who provide eldercare to their families, and lots of background research鈥 we are honored to present聽.

We took聽聽on this issue than many others: The future is impossible to predict, so we compared four scenarios along two dimensions鈥娾斺妛ith more work and less, more 鈥渢askification鈥 of jobs and less鈥娾斺奱nd we believe these are four possible futures of work in America.

Across all four there are common issues: Most importantly, workers crave stability.聽On average, only people who make $150,000 a year or more say they value doing work that is important to them. Everyone else prioritizes an income that is stable and secure. Yet fewer than half of Americans earn a stable amount every month.

Even those who are doing well today are understandably nervous about the future鈥娾斺奱nd they believe, perhaps mistakenly, that their prospects for the future are better than the data suggest. (Take their views of their children: 73% think their kids will earn more than they do, yet fewer than half do today.)

In all four futures,聽we must address our slowing economic vitality鈥娾斺奱 dynamism that has, contrary to popular belief in the technology industry, not been accelerating. Sustained investment in technology by all sectors will need to be part of the solution, and slowing or avoiding technological change is a misguided attempt to put genies back into bottles.

Across all scenarios,聽we need an economy that offers more and better work to older people鈥娾斺妛ith each passing year, there will be more and more older people willing and able to work, perhaps in non-traditional jobs.

Across all,聽we need to figure out how to land the rewards of work in places all across the country that are left behind.

In the 鈥淕o鈥 and 鈥淛ump Rope鈥 scenarios, we continue our frenetic pace of work and need to figure out the relationship between workers and their employers鈥娾斺奵hanges to how governments regulate different kinds of work and new social safety nets among others.

In the 鈥淜ing of the Castle鈥 and 鈥淩ock-Paper-Scissors鈥 scenarios, we need to urgently鈥娾斺奺ven more urgently than today鈥娾斺妑aise the floor for those who are worst off.

Debates about the future of work that are based on predictions should remember John Kenneth Galbraith鈥檚 reminder that 鈥淲e have two classes of forecasters: Those who don鈥檛 know鈥娾斺奱nd those who don鈥檛 know they don鈥檛 know.鈥

We don鈥檛 know, and the debate over what will happen (鈥渨ill the robots take all the jobs鈥) is distracting us from dealing with technology鈥檚 effects聽迟辞诲补测.听We hope this report gives people in technology, government, civil society, the arts, business, academia, and everywhere else the foundation to describe the problem to each other.

You can read our report聽.

We are grateful for the members of our commission traveling far and wide and lending us their focused attention; the wide range of working people who spoke with us; the scholars and institutes and companies who devoted prior study to this issue; the tireless staff that dotted our i鈥檚 and crossed our t鈥檚, and, most important,聽you鈥娾斺妛ho must, as we all must, be part of the solution.

We hope our findings prompt you to think differently and deeply about what may be the most important issue of our era.

More 麻豆果冻传媒 the Authors

Roy Bahat
Findings of Shift: The Commission on Work, Workers, and Technology