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What is Technological Unemployment

Machine Law, Ethics, and Morality in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
A sort of unemployment that occurs when people are without work (and seeking work) due to innovative production processes and labor-saving organizational solutions.
Published in Chapter:
Machines and Technological Unemployment: Basic Income vs. Basic Capital
Elias Moser (Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz, Austria)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4894-3.ch012
Abstract
Recently, economic studies on labor market developments have indicated that there is a potential threat of technological mass unemployment. Both smart robotics and information technology may perform a broad range of tasks that today are fulfilled by human labor. This development could lead to vast inequalities. Proponents of an unconditional basic income have, therefore, employed this scenario to argue for their cause. In this chapter, the author argues that, although a basic income might be a valid answer to the challenge of technological unemployment, it fails to account for some ethical problems specific to future expectations of mass unemployment. The author introduces the proposal of an unconditional basic capital and shows how it can address these problems adequately and avoid objections against a basic income. However, the basic capital proposal cannot replace all redistributive social policies. It has to be interpreted as a supplement to either a basic income or more traditional redistributive policies.
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More Results
Two Sides of the Medallion in the Global Workforce as the Metaverse Evolves: New Job Opportunities and Technological Unemployment
It is the unemployment that arises as a result of the technological tools, equipment and processes used in production becoming increasingly capital intensive.
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Doing More With Less: The Impact of New Technologies on Labor Markets, Economy, and Society
Refers to the loss of jobs caused by the deployment of innovations in work processes. See Automation.
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