Subtitles section Play video
-
How long do you think it will take
-
before machines do your job better than you do?
-
Automation used to mean big stupid machines doing repetitive work in factories.
-
Today they can land aircraft, diagnose cancer and trade stocks.
-
We are entering a new age of automation unlike anything that's come before.
-
According to a 2013 study, almost half of all jobs in the
-
US could potentially be automated in the next two decades.
-
But wait; Hasn't automation been around for decades?
-
What's different this time?
-
Things used to be simple.
-
Innovation made human work easier and productivity rose.
-
Which means that more staff or services could be produced
-
per hour using the same amount of human workers.
-
This eliminated many jobs, but also created other jobs that were better
-
which was important because the growing population needed work.
-
So, in a nutshell, innovation, higher productivity,
-
fewer old jobs, and many new and often better jobs.
-
Overall, this worked well for a majority of people and living standards improved.
-
There's a clear progression in terms of what humans did for
-
a living. For the longest time, we worked in agriculture.
-
With the Industrial Revolution, this shift into production jobs and as
-
automation became more widespread, humans shifted into service jobs.
-
And then only a few moments ago in human history, the Information Age happened.
-
Suddenly, the rules were different. Our jobs are now being
-
taken over by machines much faster than they were in the past.
-
That's worrying of course... but innovation will clearly save us, right?
-
While new information age industries are booming,
-
they are creating fewer and fewer new jobs.
-
In 1979, General Motors employed more than 800,000
-
workers and made about $11 billion US dollars.
-
In 2012, Google made about $14 billion US dollars while employing 58,000 people.
-
You may not like this comparison, but Google is
-
an example of what created new jobs in the past:
-
Innovative new industries.
-
Old innovative industries are running out of steam. Just look at cars.
-
When they became a thing 100 years ago, they created huge industries.
-
Cars transformed our way of life, our infrastructure, and our cities.
-
Millions of people found jobs either directly or indirectly.
-
Decades of investment kept this momentum going.
-
Today, this process is largely complete. Innovation in the
-
car industry does not create as many jobs as it used to.
-
While electric cars are great and all, they won't create millions of new jobs.
-
But wait; what about the internet?
-
Some technologists argue that the Internet is an
-
innovation on a par of the introduction of electricity.
-
If we go with this comparison, we see how our
-
modern innovation differs from the old one.
-
The Internet created new industries,
-
but they're not creating enough jobs to keep up
-
with population growth or to compensate for the industries the Internet is killing.
-
At its peak in 2004,
-
Blockbuster had 84,000 employees and made $6 billion US dollars in revenue.
-
In 2016, Netflix had 4,500 employees and made $9 billion dollars in revenue.
-
Or take us, for example.
-
With a full-time team of just 12 people, Kurzgesagt reaches millions of people.
-
A TV station with the same amount of viewers needs way more employees.
-
Innovation in the Information Age doesn't equate to
-
the creation of enough new jobs, which would be bad
-
enough on its own but now, a new wave of automation and
-
a new generation of machines is slowly taking over.
-
To understand this, we need to understand ourselves first.
-
Human progress is based on the division of labor.
-
As we advanced over thousands of years, our jobs became more and more specialized.
-
While even our smartest machines are bad at doing complicated jobs,
-
they are extremely good at doing narrowly defined and predictable tasks.
-
This is what destroyed factory jobs.
-
But look at a complex job long and hard enough,
-
and you'll find that it's really just many narrowly
-
defined and predictable tasks one after another.
-
Machines are on the brink of becoming so good at
-
breaking down complex jobs into many predictable ones,
-
that for a lot of people, there will be no further room to specialize.
-
We are on the verge of being outcompeted.
-
Digital machines do this via machine learning,
-
which enables them to acquire information and skills by analyzing data.
-
This makes them become better at something through the relationships they discover.
-
Machines teach themselves.
-
We make this possible by giving a computer a lot of
-
data about the thing we wanted to become better at.
-
Show a machine all the things you bought online,
-
and it will slowly learn what to recommend to you, so you buy more things.
-
Machine learning is now meeting more of its potential because in recent years,
-
humans have started to gather data about everything.
-
Behavior, weather patterns, medical records, communication systems,
-
travel data, and of course, data about what we do at work.
-
What we've created by accident is a huge library machines can
-
use to learn how humans do things and learn to do them better.
-
These digital machines might be the biggest job killer of all.
-
They can be replicated instantly and for free.
-
When they improve, you don't need to invest in
-
big metal things; you can just use the new code.
-
And they have the ability to get better fast. How fast?
-
If your work involves complex work on a computer today, you might be out
-
of work even sooner than the people who still have jobs in factories.
-
There are actual real-world examples of how this transition might be happening.
-
A San Francisco company offers a project management software for big
-
corporations, which is supposed to eliminate middle management positions.
-
When it's hired for a new project, the software first decides which jobs
-
can be automated and precisely where it needs actual professional humans.
-
It then helps assemble a team of freelancers over the Internet.
-
The software then distributes tasks to the humans, and controls the quality
-
of the work, tracking individual performance until the project is complete.
-
Okay. This doesn't sound too bad.
-
While this machine is killing one job, it creates jobs for freelancers, right?
-
Well, as the freelancers complete their tasks,
-
learning algorithms track them, and gather data
-
about their work, and which tasks it consists of.
-
So what's actually happening, is that
-
the freelancers are teaching a machine how to replace them.
-
On average, this software reduces costs by about 50%
-
in the first year, and by another 25% in the second year.
-
This is only one example of many.
-
There are machines and programs getting as good
-
or better than humans in all kinds of fields.
-
From pharmacists to analysts, journalists to radiologists,
-
cashiers to bank tellers, or the unskilled worker flipping burgers.
-
All of these jobs won't disappear overnight,
-
but fewer and fewer humans will be doing them.
-
We'll discuss a few cases in a follow-up video.
-
But while jobs disappearing is bad, it's only half of the story.
-
It's not enough to substitute old jobs with new ones.
-
We need to be generating new jobs constantly
-
because the world population is growing.
-
In the past we have solved this through innovation.
-
But, since 1973, the generation of new jobs in the US has begun to shrink.
-
And the first decade of the 21st century, was the first one, where
-
the total amount of jobs in the US, did not grow for the first time.
-
In a country that needs to create up to 150,000 new jobs per
-
month, just to keep up with population growth, this is bad news.
-
This is also starting to affect standards of living.
-
In the past, it was seen as obvious that with rising
-
productivity, more and better jobs would be created.
-
But the numbers tell a different story.
-
In 1998, US workers worked a total of 194 billion hours.
-
Over the course of the next 15 years, their output increased by 42 percent.
-
But in 2013, the amount of hours worked by US workers was still 194 billion hours.
-
What this means, is that despite productivity growing
-
drastically, thousands of new businesses opening up, and the
-
US population growing by over 40 million, there was no
-
growth at all in the number of hours worked in 15 years.
-
At the same time, wages for new university graduates
-
in the US, have been declining for the past decade,
-
while up to 40 percent of new graduates, are forced
-
to take on jobs that don't require a degree.
-
Productivity is separating from human labor.
-
The nature of innovation in the Information Age is
-
different from everything we've encountered before.
-
This process started years ago and is already well underway.
-
Even without new disruptions like self-driving cars, or robot accountants.
-
It looks like automation is different this time.
-
This time, the machines might really take our jobs.
-
Our economies are based on the premise that people consume.
-
But if fewer and fewer people have decent work, who will be doing all the consuming?
-
Are we producing ever more cheaply only to arrive at a point where
-
too few people can actually buy all our stuff and services?
-
Or, will the future see a tiny minority of the super rich who own the machines...
-
dominating the rest of us?
-
And does our future really have to be that grim?
-
While we were fairly dark in this video, it's far
-
from certain that things will turn out negatively.
-
The Information Age and modern automation, could be a huge opportunity
-
to change human society, and reduce poverty and inequality drastically.
-
It could be a seminal moment in human history.
-
We'll talk about this potential, and possible solutions like
-
a universal basic income, in part 2 of this video series.
-
We need to think big, and fast.
-
Because one thing's for sure, the machines are not coming;
-
They are already here.
-
This video took us about 900 hours to make,
-
and we've been working on it for over nine months.
-
Projects like this one would not be possible
-
without your support on patreon.com.
-
If you want to help us out and get a personal
-
Kurzgesagt bird in return, that would be really useful.
-
We based much of this video on two very good books:
-
and
-
You can find links to both of them in the video description; highly recommended!
-
Also, we made a little robot poster.
-
You can buy it and a lot of other stuff in our DFTBA shop.
-
This video is part of a larger series about how technology
-
is already changing and will change human life forever.
-
If you want to continue watching, we have a few playlists.