The Problem
In a companion paper (ap3 NEW JOBS FOR THE COMING GENERATION), the trend toward automation of the work of civilization by computers and robots and the resultant loss of jobs, along with a potential source of work to counter this trend and provide employment for the coming generations was described. It was claimed that this new source of jobs (the SEMAN, a vessel that operates on the oceans to harvest energy from wind, waves and sun) is free from the threat of automation, but little proof of this claim was given. It was also noted that the SEMAN was capable of giving a middle class income. It was finally claimed that the SEMAN was capable of delivering work that is resistant to the impact of an economic downturn. But the SEMAN delivers sea-based jobs, and many people would rather work on land. In another companion paper ap3A NEW LAND JOBS FOR THE COMING GENERATION, the land jobs that are generated by the SEMAN are described, and it was noted that these jobs would be resistant to automation and recession as well. In this paper, the limits of automation will be explored, and the resultant characteristics of these potential new land-based, good paying, automation resistant jobs described. It will be found that in general, a job that works toward independence from outside economic forces has the greatest potential to provide work that is good paying and automation resistant, and such jobs are almost ready to come on line, and they are both land and sea based, and are connected to the SEMAN,
Definition of Terms
Certain terms used in this paper have different meanings to different people, so in order reduce confusion; the following definitions will be used here.
- Goal-the end result of a sequence of operations that improves the happiness and productivity of mankind.
- Operation-the end result of a sequence of tasks that aims at accomplishment of a goal.
- Task-the fundamental unit of work that aims at completion of an operation.
- Computer-a machine capable of performing logical operations and defining tasks for an operation that exist in cyber space.
- Robot-a machine capable of carrying out tasks defined by a computer in the real world.
- Automation-the process of replacing a human worker by a machine such as an assembly line, the Internet, a computer or a robot or a combination of these machines.
Job Types that are Being Sought that Provide Job Security
The job types being sought in the world have the following characteristics.
- The job should not be capable of being automated.
- The job should yield a middle class income.
- The job should be resistant to the impact of an economic downturn or recession.
- At least some of these jobs should be land based.
Limits of Automation
There are limits to the ability of computers and robots to take over the jobs usually done by people. The intrinsic character of the computers and robots determines these limits. The most important of these characteristic limitations are as follows.
- Computers and robots are normally constructed to help increase the happiness and productivity of mankind, and they are not able to determine how to fill these needs without input from mankind to define the goals of the operations performed.
- Computers and robots are best suited to the tasks that are simple and repetitive that must be done for civilization to function, while allowing people to determine the operations that accomplish the goals that increase human happiness and productivity.
- Computers and robots are not able to accomplish tasks and complete operations for incompletely defined goals, and cannot complete tasks for operations when the data on which the task are based are not a complete set. A human can.
- The cost of computers and robots is high and they are usually designed for a specific task in an operation, and so this equipment must be used enough to justify its initial expense. A human, on the other hand, is versatile, and can cover many different kinds of jobs so it is easier to justify his/her initial expense. Note, however, that computers and robots are usually cheaper to operate than humans, over the long run, if the utilization is high enough, because the overhead is much lower.
It should be noted that there are computer and robot designers hard at work trying to expand the scope of computer/robot capabilities to include the more creative aspects of human capability, and so allow computers and robots to work on the indeterminate problems mentioned above. Thus far, however, they have had very limited success, so the limits of automation described above are still valid.
The jobs that can be automated by computers, robots and in some cases product redesign for ease of production, fall into three categories in increasing order of difficulty of design, construction and operation.
- Simple, fixed position, single task, repeatable jobs.
- Simple, mobile, single task, repeatable jobs.
- Complex, mobile, multi task, changing instruction jobs.
The use of all three categories of computer and robot devices in automating all major job types will be described below. Job resistance to automation by any of the three categories shown is what will be described for in this paper.
Income Level
Jobs are not necessarily compensated by money alone, but if it were, an annual income of $50,000 to $100,000 would be roughly correct to maintain a comfortable life style for a family of two adults and two children. This is usually considered to be the income range for middle class families. If rent and food were given by the job, a proportionately smaller income would be acceptable. If maintenance for equipment used in the job were necessary, a proportionately larger income would be required. This $50,000 to $100,000 income range is what will be aimed for in this paper.
Resistance to Economic Downturn
All economies are subject to oscillations. If a job were only good for one cycle (~5 to 10 years), it would be considered unstable and thus undesirable. If a job were good for a working lifetime (~30 to 60 years), it would be considered a stable and desirable. Job stability through several recessions and extending toward a working lifetime is what will be aimed for in this paper.
Jobs Types that Exist Now
Let us start by going through the entire list of jobs that exist in the US according to the latest census, and describing how a large number of these jobs are fast disappearing from the modern economy as witnessed by current trends shown by a sequence of these censuses. We would expect that the proportion of jobs in each category would remain roughly the same even as the population rises because the need for the product from each category is proportional to population, and so the need for workers in each category is also proportional to the population. Two things can change this conclusion, automation, which reduces the number of workers in a category for the same product output, and new industries, which increases the number of categories, and so the number of jobs. In this list of job categories, the change in the number of jobs in the existing job categories will be addressed.
- Farming, fishing and mining jobs are largely definable, simple, mobile, single task and repetitive and so are amenable to automation by category 2 devices. The simple jobs are mostly gone now. The remaining definable, simple jobs (mostly harvesting) are gradually going to category 2 devices, leaving the business owner/manager and maintenance workers. A reduction of the share of the work force by 1/3 is expected in this simple category by 2050.
- Manufacturing jobs are mostly definable, simple, fixed, single task and repetitive, and so they have almost disappeared, having been replaced by the assembly line and category 1 devices. The remaining jobs are those requiring category 2 and 3 devices. By 2050, use of more advanced robots for these more complex tasks is expected to reduce this share of the work force by 1/3 toward designers, managers and maintenance workers.
- Construction jobs are largely definable, complex, mobile, single and multi task and changing instruction and so are amenable to automation by category 2 and 3 devices. These basic jobs (carpenters, plumbers, electricians, etc.) are disappearing slowly because of the difficulty of the computer/robot design, but eventually only architects, engineers, construction managers and maintenance workers will remain. By 2050, new computers and robots are expected to reduce this share of the work force by 1/2 toward designers, managers and maintenance
- Wholesale and retail trade jobs have been difficult to automate because they are hard to define and many people would prefer to see their purchases and trade with a person. The Internet offered a way around this difficulty, and so it is making inroads into this group of jobs. By 2050, computers are expected to reduce this share of the work force by 2/3.
- Transport, warehousing and utilities are mostly definable, complex, mobile, multi task and changing instruction and so are amenable to automation by category 3 devices. These devices are difficult to design, so this shift is going slowly. By 2050, computers and robots are expected to reduce this share of the work force by 1/5.
- Information jobs are mostly indefinable, and so are not amenable to automation.
- Finance, insurance, real estate, rental and leasing jobs are hard, but not impossible to define and people would prefer to trade with a person, so automation is going very slowly in this category of jobs. Little change is expected here.
- Professional, science, management and administration jobs are mostly indefinable, and so are not amenable to automation.
- Educational services, health care and social services jobs are difficult to define and people prefer to deal with people here, so this category is mostly not amenable to automation, but some of these jobs can be automated by computers and category 3 devices. This industry is expected to increase its share of the work force for a short time, and then start to lose its share as more efficient means of accomplishing these goals become available. This is especially true of health care and social services, where anti viral medicines; gene repair techniques (for cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer’s and other brain damage conditions) that are just coming on line are expected to eventually have a dramatic impact on the number of health care and social services workers required. The impact will be on the surgical procedures, etc. which require hospital stay. By 2050, a reduction of this share of the work force by 1/2 is expected to result.
- Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodations and food services jobs are partly indefinable and the rest difficult to define, so if they are automated, it will be done slowly by category 3 devices. In the mean time, by 2050, an increase of this share of the work force by 1/3 is expected to meet new demand because of increase in leisure time due to automation.
- Public administration and other services jobs are mostly indefinable and so are not amenable to automation.
- Armed forces jobs are mostly definable, complex, mobile, multitask and changing instruction and so are amenable to automation by category 3 devices leaving officers and maintenance workers. The difficulty and expense of the computer/robot design is expected to make automation extremely slow, so by 2050, little change in this share of the work force is expected.
There are three other occupations that are important.
- People who are self employed owner/operators and live on their business or owners that live on their investments. This occupation is expected to increase its share as more people use investments and business ownership to become independent of the work-a-day world. By its very nature, this employment cannot be automated. This is expected to take a rapidly increasing share of the work force-see below for more on this category.
- People who are employed in new innovative industries that form a new job category. The proportion of the work force in this category is expected to be small, because most new jobs are the incidental result of an attempt to make a profitable new industry. As a result, the new industry is designed to minimize the number of jobs in order to maximize the profit. This category is expected to account for less than 1% of the work force.
- People, who are unemployed, disabled or are on welfare. The acceptable percentage of unemployed in an industrialized nation is roughly 3%. The acceptable percentage of those disabled or on welfare is roughly 2%. For the US, this 5 % works out to be is 4.6 million people. World wide (assuming the world economy becomes similar to the US), this percentage works out to be 123 million people. The unemployed category is expected to increase its share of the work force until a way is determined to move them into the professional, science, management and self employed owner/operator categories that cannot be automated, as new jobs of this type are generated. Eventually, this category will reach an irreducible minimum and support for them will have to be provided as civilization’s overhead.
Note that most jobs are amenable to automation, but some are not, and the people filling the jobs that are not, have job security. Note that the ones providing the most job security are, or are the equivalent of, a small business owner/operator. However, such a small business must be resistant to bad economic times and still provide the necessities of life or it will not survive a recession. Further, the business must provide a middle class income to maintain an acceptable standard of living for the owner.
Characteristics of New Jobs That Can Fit the Desired Job Types
In order to have the job characteristics of resistance to automation, middle class income, and resistance to recession, the new jobs should have the following characteristics.
- The worker should be able to address incompletely defined goals, and/or use incompletely defined data, so computers and robots cannot replace him/her. In addition, the work should be complex, mobile, multi task, and require changing instructions in order to maximize the difficulty and cost of replacing the worker with a computer and/or a robot.
- The product must be producible at a cost that always allows for sale at a profit.
- The product must have a large, long-lived market that will maintain itself through an economic downturn.
- The fundamental needs of life (food, water, shelter and domestic energy) should be available from the work independent of the short-term profitability of the business in order to insure that the worker can ride out a recession without losing his business or getting into debt simply in order to supply personal needs. Thus it must be possible to go into a kind of hibernation until business conditions improve.
- The capital equipment necessary to accomplish these tasks will normally require a loan or mortgage to pay for it. Thus a certain minimum income is required to make mortgage payments.
Few, if any jobs can boast all of these characteristics. Yet by combining several occupations, a close approximation can be achieved. Consider the following.
- Owner/operator is the job type most likely to require addressing incompletely defined goals and data (characteristic 1) because it requires certain creative characteristics on the part of the worker. Professional, science, management, arts and entertainment jobs also are likely to fit this requirement, but there are fewer people that are expected to fit the requirements for these latter jobs.
- In order to insure that the product for sale can be produced at a profit (characteristic 2), the skills required of the worker, the materials required for production, the cost of the place the product is produced and the equipment needed to produce it must be minimized. The minimum is to produce the product with carpentry and electrician skills with hand tools in the worker’s shelter or home.
- The products that maintain a strong demand during a recession (characteristic 3) are the basic needs for survival, namely food, water, shelter and domestic energy.
- If the worker’s shelter is properly constructed, the shelter is near the ocean, and there is a source of domestic energy, the worker’s fundamental needs (characteristic 4) can be supplied by use of hydroponics for food, reverse osmosis for water and wind, waves and sun for domestic energy.
- In order to make mortgage payments (characteristic 5), a certain minimum sale of product is required. If the demand in a recession is strong enough, this can be accomplished. This can be done on three levels, namely
- Mortgage only.
- Interest only.
- Suspension of payments until sales improve.
The last two require patience on the part of the mortgage holder.
New Jobs to Fulfill the Need
Most new jobs are the incidental result of an attempt to make a profitable new industry. As a result, the new industry is designed to minimize the number of jobs in order to maximize the profit. Thus the number of jobs created is small. Here, an industry under development will be described that is designed to maximize the number of interesting, good paying jobs that cannot be automated and are recession proof. Specifically, the company Aquater2050 LLC that operates and builds the SEMAN or Seagoing Energy Module with Automatic Navigation-stabilization will be described. This SEMAN is designed to harvest clean energy from the oceans to replace fossil fuels and provide 400 million jobs on the sea and 150 million jobs on the land. None of the primary jobs indicated can be automated, but some auxiliary jobs connected with the SEMAN will be amenable to automation. These jobs and their differences will be described.
The SEMAN is an ocean going vessel that harvests and sells energy. In order to maximize the efficiency of this operation and so make the SEMAN profitable, the SEMAN designer collects a group of the needs of the operators in one package and, in the SEMAN, offers shelter, food, fresh water, domestic energy and transportation, so the operator can hunt for and harvest energy without being concerned about his/her basic needs. Note that this set of capabilities works toward independence from outside economic forces such as recession or change of consumption habits. Whatever happens in the outside world, the operator has his/her basic needs covered, and the product, energy, is required by all, and so the market will never disappear. Economic conditions can drive down the selling price, but they can never cause the need to disappear. Note also that the SEMAN provides a means to sequester carbon dioxide, which will be required for the foreseeable future. Note also that a computer would have no means of determining what the needs of mankind are and which can be grouped together and how to group them without human input, so a human designer is required. On the other hand, construction of a SEMAN consists of a series of easily defined (carpenter and electrical tasks), repeated tasks that can be automated with robots. Further, since a large number of SEMAN are required, the robot’s expense can be amortized over many SEMAN. Clearly, a human must fill the design job, and a computer cannot replace that human, but robots can accomplish construction. Note also that people with relatively simple skills can also accomplish construction; so common workers can build SEMAN in developing countries in the initial stages of the development of this industry.
The operation of a SEMAN consists of choosing an operation zone in an energetic (high wind) area of the ocean, choosing an operating direction to optimize energy production, and operating the vessel in such a fashion as to maximize the amount of energy harvested for sale on land, maximize food production for personal consumption, and allow for the pursuit of some profitable side businesses. The operation of the vessel, however, consists of a set of fixed, definable tasks (such as setting the angle of the sails and rudder for maximizing energy output) that can be automated and thus allowing the SEMAN to operate with fewer crew. This allows the business to save on operating expense. The choice of the operation zone and operating direction are not completely and clearly defined, and so are not amenable to automation, but most of the crew can be automated. The designer and the captain (owner/operator) appear to be safe in their jobs. The captain can take his/her family along since there is food and shelter available. The SEMAN can and probably will operate in groups or “pods”, to provide company, overcome loneliness, and insure help in case of trouble.
Note finally, that the land-based jobs connected with the SEMAN will consist of small, often isolated businesses, widely spaced around the coasts of the world in order to conveniently receive and sell energy, and make, outfit and trade with SEMAN owner/operators. Because of the isolation of these businesses, it will usually be necessary for these owner/operators to provide their own food, water and domestic energy by use of the same techniques as SEMAN. These businesses will, of necessity, remain small and separated and are not amenable to automation. However, because these businesses cannot pursue optimum energy gathering conditions like SEMAN, they cannot always provide enough energy. The SEMAN must provide back up energy under these conditions.
No other industry under development is known that provides all of these characteristics.
Summary and Conclusions
Most new jobs are the incidental result of an attempt to make a profitable new industry. As a result, the new industry is designed to minimize the number of jobs in order to maximize the profit. Thus the number of jobs created is small. Here, an industry under development was described that is designed to maximize the number of jobs with the following requirements:
- The job should not be capable of being automated.
- The job should yield a middle class income.
- The job should be resistant to the impact of an economic downturn or recession.
In order to have these job requirements, the job type should have the following characteristics.
1. The worker should be able to address incompletely defined goals, and/or use incompletely defined data, so computers and robots cannot replace him/her. In addition, the work should be complex, mobile, multi task, and require changing instructions in order to maximize the difficulty and cost of replacing the worker with a computer and/or a robot.
2. The product must be producible at a cost that always allows for sale at a profit.
3. The product must have a large, long-lived market that will maintain itself through an economic downturn.
4. The fundamental needs of life (food, water, shelter and domestic energy) should be available from the work independent of the short-term profitability of the business in order to insure that the worker can ride out a recession without losing his business or getting into debt in order to supply personal needs.
5. The capital equipment necessary to accomplish these tasks will normally require a loan or mortgage to pay for it. Thus a certain minimum income is required to make mortgage payments.
Few, if any jobs can boast all of these characteristics. Yet by combining several occupations, a close approximation can be achieved. Consider the following job types.
- Owner/operator is the job type most likely to require addressing incompletely defined goals and data (characteristic 1). Professional, science, management, arts and entertainment jobs also are likely to fit this requirement, but there are fewer people that are expected to fit the requirements for these latter jobs.
- In order to insure that the product for sale can be produced at a profit (characteristic 2), the skills required of the worker, the materials required for production, the cost of the place the product is produced and the equipment needed to produce it must be minimized. The minimum is to produce the product with carpentry and electrician skills with hand tools in the worker’s shelter or home.
- The products that maintain a strong demand during a recession (characteristic 3) are the basic needs for survival, namely food, water, shelter and domestic energy.
- If the worker’s shelter is properly constructed, the shelter is on or near the ocean, and there is a source of domestic energy, the worker’s fundamental needs (characteristic 4) can be supplied by use of hydroponics for food, reverse osmosis for water and wind, waves and sun for domestic energy.
- In order to make mortgage payments (characteristic 5), a certain minimum sale of product is required. If the demand in a recession is strong enough, this can be accomplished. This can be done on three levels, depending on the patience of the lender, namely
- Mortgage only.
- Interest only.
- Suspension of payments until sales improve.
The company Aquater2050 LLC that will operate and build the SEMAN or Seagoing Energy Module with Automatic Navigation-stabilization was found to have these characteristics. This SEMAN is designed to harvest clean energy from the oceans to replace fossil fuels and provide 400 million jobs on the sea and 150 million jobs on the land. This appears to be the only company that has all these characteristics.
Notes
1. More details and references are given on Aquater2050.com. for members.
2. For those interested in aiding the completion of the SEMAN prototype to speed the development of these new jobs, a donation button is provided on this site’s Home Page. Click on the “Add to Cart” button on the Home Page.
3. To see progress on the prototype, click on “SEMAN Prototype Update” on the Home Page.