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Polymathica Refined.. Erudite.. Visionary © 2010 The Institute for Advanced Social
and Technological Analysis, LLC |
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The Information Age Income Explosion
From
1875 to 2010 U.S. In a civilization
where nearly half the households will have annual incomes in the millions, it
is unlikely that political sentiment will countenance any penury whatsoever.
Consequently, we suspect that there will be a stipend for those without
sufficient self generated income. It most likely will meet or exceed a level
of income that, today, would be considered middle class income. We can
imagine that what will be considered the poverty level in twenty years will
have quadrupled right along with the quadrupling of average and median
incomes. In other words, one person will be guaranteed $40,830 per year, a
couple or a custodial parent and child will be guaranteed $72,840 per year
and the classic ‘family of four’ will be guaranteed $136,200 per year. These rates, however,
would be subject to some adjustment in order to assist in balancing the labor
supply and demand. When the number of people searching for work is less than
is required, the level of support provided to those who do not work will
decrease, thus encouraging to supplement their income. When the number of
people searching for work exceeds what is needed, the level of support will
increase. The middle
socioeconomic level will be engaged in service activities that, while
automated, retain a human function primarily because humans wish to interact
with humans when they are consuming them. Take for example, a fast food
restaurant. Even now, we could probably build a restaurant that, through
automation and AI, could function without human
intervention. However, generally, people would prefer to interact with a
person during the ordering, delivering and paying process. The price differential
between a $4.00 hamburger in a human mediated fast food restaurant and a
$2.65 hamburger at a totally automated restaurant, in a very affluent
society, is going to be insufficient to cause the majority of people to
frequent the totally automated one. Of course, with a
median household income of $760K per year, one may assume that, over time,
even a $4.00 personally delivered hamburger is likely to be an endangered
species. It will be replaced in most settings with a more leisurely fine dining
experience. A $15 fast food bill for an average family today will be
proportionately the same as a $190 restaurant tab in 2048. Consequently, we
will expect that frequently the purchased meal will involve a chef and maitre
d’ overseeing an automated fine dining experience. From landscaping to
interior design to medicine, even if AI programs can perform as well or
better than humans, the customer will still want to interact with a person.
For example, a landscaper may interview a customer and then go back to his
office and create a computer assisted design. The computer did much of the
work, but he will present it and, if the customer accepts the design and
price, he will arrive with landscaping robots and oversee the work while
interacting, again, with the customer. An AI diagnostic
software program may provide the doctor with a list of diagnoses in
descending order of probability and suggest further diagnostic tests. Already
these programs outperform most doctors. Another AI program may give the doctors
a comprehensive list of treatment options with the likely probability of
success and suggest possible combinations of treatments. However, no matter
how AI assisted, the patient will want to talk to the doctor, ask questions
of the doctor and feel reassured by a person, not an AI program. At the highest
socio-economic level will be knowledge professionals, for the most part
Polymaths, who will create and communicate visions and apply volition to the
social, cultural and economic systems. They will engage in activities that,
even if a computer could do them, humans will prefer to retain as their
prerogative. This will include great thinkers, pundits and leaders
who will teach, present and discuss. It will include great designers who,
with the assistance of AI programs, will create new products, new services,
comprehensively designed communities, etc. It will include scientists,
artists, composers who will drive human progress in a uniquely human way. It
will include entrepreneurs who will oversee the automated production
processes. These three categories
are arbitrary. Many people will spend portions of their lives in different
ones. A person may be on stipend during periods of intense learning, in
service activities early in their life and then, over time, find that their
productive activities evolve into one or more of the knowledge professions.
Additionally, some activities are actually a spectrum that bridges the
service sector and the knowledge professions. Many people will engage in
both. For example, a person may design clothes but also oversee their robotic
manufacture. So, while the trifurcated socio-economic description is
basically correct, it is not exactly correct and should not be interpreted
too rigidly. It is manifestly
clear, however, that there is not a category designated as ‘employee’,
professional level or otherwise. As we all are very aware, manufacturing jobs
left developed countries to chase cheap labor in low labor rate locations.
Today, we now find that professional jobs are chasing cheap labor in
underdeveloped countries. These activities will be returning, but they will
not reemploy the previously displaced workers. Rather, they will be
automated. to happen very rapidly.
Right now at the larger companies, automated AR and AP software is being
installed. From the time of order to receipt to payment, human hands will not
touch the process. It is important that everyone Google ‘DARPA 2007 Urban
Challenge’ and see what was possible three years ago. Today, the technologies
have progressed and the results are
amazing. By 2020, anyone who currently makes a living by driving a
vehicle will most likely be out of a job. Nearly half the jobs done on a
residential new construction site are well within the current robotic
technology. Clothing will be custom tailored by robot. We could go on and on,
and we will. You may be skeptical. We understand and we will address those
reservations as we continue. Very quickly, because
we deal with it elsewhere, we do not expect that there will be an unabated
geometric explosion past our income levels due to a 'Singularity'. We believe
that the rate of growth in computer technology is abating already. Clock
rates on retail computers are not going up. Rather than more powerful CPU's,
multi-core computers are being built. While Kurzweil, et al, are their
pinning hopes upon carbon nanotube circuitry, the pace of technological
development there is already falling behind where it needs to be to continue
the geometric progression. It is beginning to appear that computers are
reaching technological maturity, at least for now. However, much of what is
already possible is not implemented. Consequently, robotics and applied AI
will not reach economic maturity at least until 2050. So, for those who
would not only like to learn more about this, but also affiliate, associate
and collaborate to take advantage of the opportunities presented by the
emerging global, Information Age civilization, we are providing the
Polymathica Fellowship. If you are ready to consider developing an
entrepreneurial and polymathic knowledge career, your first step is to follow
us on The Fellows of
Polymathica blog. |
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