Science

MIT economists: Automation is driving huge increases in wage inequality

MIT economists: Automation is driving huge increases in wage inequality
Self service supermarket checkouts: a perfect example of a type of automation that does nothing much for overall productivity, but directly drives the income equality gap wider by taking money from less educated workers and funneling it up towards business owners
Self service supermarket checkouts: a perfect example of a type of automation that does nothing much for overall productivity, but directly drives the income equality gap wider by taking money from less educated workers and funneling it up towards business owners
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Self service supermarket checkouts: a perfect example of a type of automation that does nothing much for overall productivity, but directly drives the income equality gap wider by taking money from less educated workers and funneling it up towards business owners
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Self service supermarket checkouts: a perfect example of a type of automation that does nothing much for overall productivity, but directly drives the income equality gap wider by taking money from less educated workers and funneling it up towards business owners
Americans' wages rose together until somewhere around 1980, when the gap in wage growth between the most and least educated started splitting wide apart
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Americans' wages rose together until somewhere around 1980, when the gap in wage growth between the most and least educated started splitting wide apart

The gap in wages between the most- and least-educated US citizens has risen sharply in the last 40-odd years, and new research out of MIT finds that more than half of this disparity can be attributed to a single factor: automation. This bodes poorly.

The gross domestic product value of the USA has risen from US$6.82 trillion in 1980 to more than $20 trillion in 2022. But with nearly three times the pie to go around, not everyone's ended up with more on their plate.

According to MIT Economist David Autor, things have been radically different in the last 40 years than they were in the period between 1963 and 1972, when "wages rose robustly and evenly among all education by gender groups."

While real wages have risen nicely for the postgraduate-educated since 1980, American men without high school degrees were making 15% less in 2016 than they did in 1980, adjusted for inflation. The story is similar in the UK and Germany.

Americans' wages rose together until somewhere around 1980, when the gap in wage growth between the most and least educated started splitting wide apart
Americans' wages rose together until somewhere around 1980, when the gap in wage growth between the most and least educated started splitting wide apart

A new study by two more MIT economists, Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo, interrogates this relatively recent shift towards increased inequality using a new framework that looks at tasks and allocates them to different types of labor and capital. Put simply, this new model makes it relatively easy to link wage changes in a particular group to task displacement – that is, when machines start doing somebody's job.

It's been obvious for a long time that simple, repetitive jobs don't have a great future, and indeed it's this kind of unskilled work that's been most easily replaced by automation. But the MIT team argues that, even when you control for other factors like the decrease in union participation, the impact of automation on wages for affected groups is considerably worse than anyone thought.

"This single one variable … explains 50 to 70 percent of the changes or variation between group inequality from 1980 to about 2016,” Acemoglu said in a press release. "These are controversial findings in the sense that they imply a much bigger effect for automation than anyone else has thought, and they also imply less explanatory power for other [factors]."

The study also points out a distinction between automation that actually raises overall productivity – say, moving to a robotic factory production line that manufactures things faster and with fewer errors than human workers – and automation that eliminates jobs and saves money for business owners without any increase in productivity – the perfect example being the loss of supermarket cashier jobs in favor of self checkout machines, which don't do the job much better or faster at all.

This kind of "so-so automation," as the authors describe it, is an example of the kind of automation that achieves little more than funneling money up the social strata, away from unskilled workers. It favors one group over another, with no wider benefits for society to offset this increase in inequality.

Why should the better-educated among us care about this, beyond simple empathy for our fellow man? Well, the last 40 years have just been a tasting spoon. The full double-scoop ice cream of automation is being ladled out as we speak, in a technological convergence of artificial intelligence, big data, robotics, connectivity, energy storage and a raft of other factors that promise to make light work of automating a much wider range of jobs.

Capital often sees workers as black box algorithms: given input A, it expects output B. But digital algorithms are getting smarter very quickly, while human brains have arguably done little but atrophy over the last few hundred thousand years. Today, the least educated are finding their earning power mauled by automation and decimated by inflation. Tomorrow, it'll be high school graduates, and then college graduates, at an accelerating pace.

"The pace of automation is often influenced by various institutional factors," said Acemoglu, "including labor’s bargaining power." But there's the problem; what is the bargaining power of labor when capital doesn't want it? Humanity is headed for uncharted waters in this regard. Throughout history, the rich and the poor have struck an uneasy bargain that brought everyone along on the boat ride, because the rich have always needed the poor to do the work. Labor has held capital to account for its worst excesses by occasionally pulling its one big lever: banding together and stopping work. Some have even argued that it's the value of human labor, rather than anything more esoteric and touchy-feely, that underpins the modern Western notion of human rights.

And so we march onward into a future where more and more classes of human labor become less and less valuable. Without some unprecedented structural changes, it certainly looks like the effects will be brutal.

“Acemoglu and Restrepo’s paper proposes an elegant new theoretical framework for understanding the potentially complex effects of technical change on the aggregate structure of wages,” said Patrick Kline, a professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley. “Their empirical finding that automation has been the dominant factor driving US wage dispersion since 1980 is intriguing and seems certain to reignite debate over the relative roles of technical change and labor market institutions in generating wage inequality.”

The study is open access in the journal Econometrica.

Source: MIT

6 comments
6 comments
paul314
Perhaps ironically, a lot of the "so-so automation" relies on customers to do the work that was previously done by employees. Self-checkout, phone menus, large chunks of many commercial web sites. Win-win for the corporate managers and owners.
mark34
'the GEEK shall inherit the earth'
aksdad
It's astonishing that two centuries after the Luddites destroyed textile machinery because it put people out of jobs due to their greater efficiency (and made textiles cheaper and more accessible to more people) that "economists" still cling to the same discredited arguments. Humans continually innovate. It's a natural feature of having a big brain. That innovation regularly disrupts jobs that can be performed by machinery and lots of people protest when they lose their livelihood. Do we really want to go back to manufacturing methods and inefficiencies from several decades ago to protect jobs? Or do we want to provide training for those displaced so they can stay employable in evolving industries?
BlueOak
@aksdad, exactly. The folks who write about this longstanding evolution seem to ignore it has also brought incredible advancement in the human condition. Go back 100 years and you will find that even in currently “advanced” countries most of the population spent a very large portion of their lives simply surviving. There was no talk about retiring at age 55, assuming you lived that long. There were no microwave ovens, no electricity, minimal effective medical care, no internet, no big flat panel TVs - in fact, 100 years ago average people wouldn’t have even had the leisure time to enjoy a big flat panel TV. Global hunger is down very dramatically over the past several decades.

If there is a failure in the US, it is the nanny state, a state that makes it very possible to “survive” without working, or working minimally. Even worse in this case, making it possible to “survive” without education. And you cannot force education. It must be culturally desired by society. In the poorest communities in the US, it is often the opposite - wanting to get a proper education often makes that student an outcast.

Even with automation, the trades will still be needed. The US has a severe shortage of trades labor. The US should be focusing on vocational education rather than simply college education, something that itself that has lost value over the past 10 years as more and more of the tech industry doesn’t even require a college education.
Mayhem
Just wait until automation and expert systems makes its way into white collar jobs, then you will see some hyper-eloquent whining. AIs will do things like insurance adjusting, law, engineering, and programming better, faster, and with less faults than humans. I've already got a plan for what I want to do with all of my free time once a computer takes over my job and I am really looking forward to it. It will throw our whole system of perceived value into a flat spin, but I look forward to it none the less.
ljaques
+1 to aksdad and BlueOak. Much of automation is absolutely necessary for the lifestyle the world wants and/or needs. I'm partial to self-checkout because it saves me an hour a week on my one trip into town for groceries. A friend of mine in SoCal has been automating small (4 to 30 employees) businesses for a few decades now. They all complained of going through a dozen people a year per position because the people either didn't want to work or had bad attitudes towards other workers or customers. In most cases, he put in a $50k machine and it took the place of 1 or 2 low-end employees. ROI was generally one year, and the machines should last for 2-5 decades. Several were able to lower their prices after automating. $25k/employee pay, $4,500/yr work comp insurance, and lost customers were too expensive for a small business. There ARE two sides to this argument.
@mark34 Yes, geeks and techs shall inherit the Earth. There will always be employment in the repair and adjustment of machines of all sorts. Trades forever!