We are working less and, more importantly, we are working differently (at least in the industrialised/western world). I doubt that there are still many children around in Europe working 60+ a week in coal mines, nor are people who put in exhausting physical work usually working such long hours – both of which was perfectly common less than two centuries ago.
Besides, wouldn’t it be just lazy to stop working and rest on the results of the sweat and pain of our forefathers? :\",
I agree. I'm 13 and spend over 120 hours per week in the oil mines of North Dakota. I puked when I read the first comment and slammed my laptop shut because I was shaking with disgust.
> No matter what, you don't have to work 100 hours a week to survive.
Assuming this is talking about Americans, that's sort of an entertaining claim, since most of the modern policy discussions have been about deciding whether or not you are allowed to survive if you don't work enough.
I don't know where you live, but I'll assume US. In other countries, the wages are different (usually lower), but the salary/cost of living ratio tends to be similar.
The minimum wage over there is $7.25. Are you really telling me that you need $3K per month to survive?
Are you really telling me that you need $3K per month to survive?
Maybe we need to take him more literally. Maybe what he means is he owes the mob a lot of money, and if he doesn't pay them $2.5k/month they will kill him?
Who knows what the future holds? FTL travel? Space colonization? Cold fusion?
Yes, we could stop where we are, decide things are good enough, and operate the world at subsistence levels. But who's to say we aren't twenty years from doubling the efficiency of agriculture?
A hundred years ago we could have said, trains are pretty awesome, let's stop here. But then we never would have had flight.
Five hundred years ago we could have said, horse and buggy is so much better than walking, how can I get any better than this, let's stop here. But then we wouldn't have had trains.
Technological advancement has a long track record of being very good for quality of life for everyone, and it certainly hasn't stopped, so why should we stop?
I realize you're just replying to cgag and danenania, but I want to point out that this thread is running the risk of a bad conflation:
Work != technological advancement.
More to the point, while good things come out of work, so do a lot of bad things. The more selective we can be about how we work, the more capable we are of filtering out the bad effects while retaining the good ones.
I'm not saying we should stop trying to advance technology, but how much have we really progressed if we end up with space colonization and cold fusion, but the average first world worker is still a creatively suppressed wage slave struggling to stay out of debt and the average third world worker is still a borderline real slave struggling to fulfill basic necessities?
A set of priorities that is humanist in nature and puts quality of life before advancement would lead to greater output on both sides of the coin. We know in the case of open source and experimental hacking, for example, that a driven and intelligent person's productive capacity is enhanced by additional free time, not decreased.
Put humans first. The technology will follow, and it will be better and more sustainable technology.
And before that, many societies would work 4-hour days, or work during part of daylight and have the rest of the day off.
I really don't see why people affix any sort of value to the amount of work they take when they should be concentrating on their results and how work aligns to their life.
I work less than 20 hours a week to finish my studies and generally speaking I do what I want, which includes reading technical literature (out of a personal desire to do so), cooking, and taking a 3 or 4-day weekend off every month to visit people and travel. I leave the stress to the difficult stuff (the studying bit) and live within my means, and the lack of anxiety or rush means my work is actually solid without spending excessive time to concentrate or get results.
I consider this my ideal lifestyle, not because I work little, but because I have a choice on how I live my life and how much effort I get to focus towards the things that I want.
Children spend ~ 35 hours a week, essentially preparing to be efficient workers. That is, if you ask them, usually what they will tell you they are at school to do. They will phrase it 'score high in exams, in order to get a good job'.
The fact is that they have to be there. They have to do as they are told. If they do not, the punishment lasts a lifetime.
There are other schooling systems, such as Stiener schools, which focus more on personal development. They form children who want to explore, then allow them to self direct what they explore. (That particular system also has many, many faults).
This is rather like 'work'. Your grandfather had to be in a factory many hours a day. You have to be in an office. Society says so. If you are the sort of person who is bad at knowledge work, you may well wish society told you to do something more physical. But the point is that you lack freedom.
The demographic of this message board is people working on, or thinking about, startups. Essentially, when you do a startup, you choose what you are spending your time doing. You trade in your job security for freedom.
I have known people 'drop out' of society, go on the dole, and work 14 hour days developing computer games that later sold for good money. Less admirably, I've known them to go on the dole, and spend all day playing computer games. They trade their place in society for freedom. This shows that in truth, modern society does give us the freedom. (in my country).
So why do people work? Or more pressingly, why do people work in jobs that do not meet their psychological needs for respect, autonomy, and purpose, and pay badly? Because they do, regardless of what you read in the papers, keep working at those jobs. My local supermarket is full of people who derive little identity from their work - I was one of them as a child and I know how the adult staff there think.
The answer, I think, is fear of what other people would think of them for scrounging. People like the post I am replying to. I think most people think like him.
He should, rationally, hate startup founders consuming someone elses money to mess about on a project that probably won't make a dime. And that contradiction is the problem. Societies attitude to work is not rational, and it forces people to keep doing jobs they don't want to that could be automated, instead of being free. Eventually, economics will destroy those jobs. A new role will be created that didn't exist before, adding even less value than the last (but the labour is there so why not use it). Those workers desperately take the work to avoid seeing themselves as scroungers, as the enemy. And their children will grow up desperate not to be free.
13 years of children being in schools is still fewer person-hours worked in the workpace. Children in schools are not directly creating any value through their labor.
> We are working less and, more importantly, we are working differently (at least in the industrialised/western world). I doubt that there are still many children around in Europe working 60+ a week in coal mines, nor are people who put in exhausting physical work usually working such long hours – both of which was perfectly common less than two centuries ago.
Yes, two centuries ago, but only very briefly. In human history, overall we work today far more than most humans that ever lived used to work. Farmers and hunter-gatherers for example had and have far more leisure time than "modern" people do (see for example "The World Until Yesterday").
I would believe you can still lead the life of a farmer and hunter-gatherer if you absolutely insist on doing so. But be prepared for every other of your children dying before their fifth birthday, be prepared to bury your parents at the age of twenty or forty when some perfectly-treatable disease strikes and be prepared to give up half your village’s population if it doesn’t rain as much one year.
I very much prefer working 40 to 50 hours/week than the above (though, case in point, I'll likely only start my first ‘real’ job this fall after 22 years of education…).
I've often wondered about this. As some commenters have pointed out, we don't work quite as hard as people used to have to. But we still work a lot. I suspect the short answer is healthcare costs. I was an expert in the earn-little-spend-little lifestyle for a while, but I knew it only worked because I was a healthy 25 year old with no one I had to take care of.
That might be the case for the US but in the UK and most other developed countries that isn't a factor and we still work a lot.
I think the main factor is that we both do more (waste time and push paper/design etc) than in the past thanks to computers. Also, many jobs are simply a function of population size, more people = more emails to send, calls to take etc.
I don't really understand what you mean about population size. If the need for a job scales at O(P) and you have O(P) workers, population cancels out. Not many jobs grow per-capita when population rises.
No, but large, divers populations give opportunities for work that didn't previously exist and create an extra overhead in many sectors that requires more staff (not 1 for 1 relationship but it will impact)
I've thought for some time now that corporate inflexibility was part of the cause. More of us work for large, bureaucratic companies than in the past. These sorts of companies often won't employ someone on a flexible or part-time schedule because it would be too complicated to manage. It's actually easier and cheaper to let you site at your desk and waste time for 10-20 hours a week than it would be to figure out and manage an alternative. Do you think this rings true in the UK? It certainly does (in my experience and observation) in the US, though I think in the US healthcare is at least as important a factor.
Part time and "work when needed" contracts for the 20 - 30 year old bracket is growing in the UK and has been cited as one of the ways the unemployment figure has fallen. It is concerning some workers groups according to some of the papers and the BBC.
I think if you want part time work in the UK it is easy enough to come by (engineers at many companies I know can go part time until management level if they wish) but there is a growing trend of only part time positions becoming available in some sectors and you either have to like it or lump it sadly.
The UK and every other developed country also has to somehow finance their healthcare system. Regardless of whether people pay privately or via taxes (or insurance or…), the cost still has to be covered somehow – of course, these costs can be distributed more evenly among the high earners and those earning less if they are re-routed through the tax system, but the value still has to be created somewhere.
Note that this holds even though (or in addition) the cost of healthcare per person in the US seems to be slightly higher than on average in the western world.
It’s about twice as high as in the rest of western Europe (that Americans spend more on healthcare than, say, Senegalese, is not really a surprise), which I, in my orders-of-magnitude mindset, would classify as ‘slightly’. Especially if you look at the % of GDP spent on healthcare, the picture becomes much more varied – curiously with some other pacific countries (nearly) besting the US.
That may ring true in the States, but in countries with universal health care? (Not having lived abroad, I wouldn't know)
Something more fundamental about our present economics may be at the heart of it here.... I'm no economist, but with expanding technology (Capital), diminishing demand for Labor could make for a mass prisoner's dilemma of sorts. Employees everywhere have such little negotiating room due to increasing job scarcity that they have to compete on hours worked and can't "cooperate" by working less. This seems to even hold true at the national level -- France has managed to keep most players "cooperating" (working fewer hours) but the country's economy has suffered in the global competitive landscape.
Another way to look at it could be more polarizing. The best of the new white collar class (engineers, entrepreneurs, executives, etc) has each unit of labor multiplied so significantly by the internet that there is tremendous incentive to work a lot. On the flip side, the blue collar of today -- those mentioned as call center workers, filing clerks, etc -- are just warm-blooded, more versatile machines, doing noncreative work of too little value to be worthwhile without long hours.
I would say that we no long have certainties about our future life, not just in healthcare.
We used to know where we were going to be when we became older. Because the chances were you would be dead by 50, or because your social status, or nobility, would guarantee your lifestyle when you were old, or because you had 10 children and better odds one of them would take care of you.
Now, with the benefits, like social flexibility, life expectance, and, sure, better medicine (that comes with a cost), we all live longer, entering decades we have no idea what is going to be of us. So, uncertainty, make we work harder.
Ps: as a non-native english speaker, it was very hard to deal with all those different verb tenses. I hope people can understand it...
Funny that you mention the earn-little-spend-little 25 year old lifestyle... I'm currently living that lol (though contract work here and there has given me a decent amount of money).
I find myself fighting between that happy/relaxing fantasy world, and the other side which is a goal/dream to go big with a project. Though I guess there is a 3rd side which is work your ass for a company making a good salary to support yourself later, should you be injured or retired.
Anyway, I've always believed in work smart over working hard, but I think the 'work hard' mentality will take a while to shake off... but eventually robots/machines WILL do most everything and we just won't need to be employed (or everyone will have to know engineering?).
> but eventually robots/machines WILL do most everything and we just won't need to be employed (or everyone will have to know engineering?).
Yeah, even now I'd say working is essentially about making more money than the government will give to you through welfare programs. When/if welfare payouts increase or a basic universal income is implemented there will be less demand for jobs and people from all classes will actually begin choosing whether to work or not. I think it will be a long time before basic incomes are implemented or welfare is increased in the US though.
The thing about healthcare is that the value of healthcare has risen drastically. It would be very easy to earn enough money to pay for 1950 or 1970 style healthcare.
But we want 2013 healthcare, which is far more labor intensive. I have a herniated disk. In 1950, a doctor would spend an hour telling me I'd have to live with back pain for the rest of my life. In 2012 many doctor hours were spent on my MRIs and laparoscopic surgery. Net result is that my deadlift is now about 285 - nothing impressive, but not possible in 1951.
So the short answer is that including healthcare, we work more because we want more. Many of the things we want more of require more labor in 2013 than in 1950.
Is it justifiable to assume that the cost of health care has been rising to approximately match the quality and technological improvement worldwide?
Or is it more likely that the cost has sky-rocketed out of proportion with the quality of health care (in this country or in the world) with no good reason?
In the US I'd have probably paid $20-30k for my surgery (I had it done in India for 85k rs) and it has drastically increased my quality of life. I like boxing, lifting weights, biking, sexual positions other than girl on top, and walking without pain - any one of these is worth at least $30k to me.
The ultimate question; are you willing to give up medicine invented since 1950 in return for paying 1950's prices? I'm not.
I don't think the two need to be mutually exclusive. Why can't high quality medicinal practices be coupled with lower costs if there's not reason for the costs to be higher? That was my question. Just accepting high costs and arguing the opposite extreme isn't going to help anyone or drive down prices.
There is a reason for costs to be higher - more human labor was expended on my treatment than on my hypothetical non-treatment. Combine that fact with Baumol's cost disease, and you discover that there is a good reason for things to cost more.
If I break my leg and need nothing more than some X-rays, a cast, and some opioids, do you think the hospital will hand me a bill equal to the inflation-adjusted 1970 cost of treating a broken leg?
I would say it would be difficult to get the same quality as you had in 1970 as health regulations have increased so it would be rather difficult to get an estimate if you could actually get the 1970 cost.
> I would say it would be difficult to get the same quality as you had in 1970 as health regulations have increased
Which "health regulations" have increased the "quality" of treating a basic non-compound leg fracture since 1970? And which "health regulations" does the US alone have that uniquely increase its costs?
The people preaching about flat income ignore that household size has decreased in the same period. And that's ignoring consumer surplus. We've collectively chosen a higher standard of living rather than less work.
Yeah I don't really think it has anything to do with healthcare. yummyfajitas pointed out the difference between 1950's health care and today, but that applies to just about everything. Compare a 1950's house to one of today. Compare the amount of stuff people have IN their house today. Everything is bigger, more elaborate.
I also think it is deeply engrained in our instincts that idleness is bad. If we don't keep reasonably busy in ways that result in feelings of accomplishment, we eventually become unhappy and depressed. We as a species are driven to work, as it has always been necessary for our survival.
I think it's simply that mechanization has increased wealth of only a few, and the remainder of the population still has needs and wants that require money.
As others have commented, healthcare is not a relevant factor in most of the developed world; Even in countries with a privatised or semi-privatised healthcare system, it just isn't a big expense outside of the US.
I think that the key explanation is very simple - our expectations increase with our income, creating a ratchet of consumption. There is a very good body of research showing that people feel the benefit of increased consumption only briefly, and that they feel the effects of a loss far more acutely than the effects of an equivalent gain. We also tend to value our relative status far more highly than our absolute status - "keeping up with the Joneses" is a very powerful drive. We tend to feel worse about ourselves if the people around us are becoming relatively wealthier, even if our absolute living standards have not diminished at all.
The great post-war promise of the leisure society could easily be realised if we maintained post-war standards of living. It's not very expensive to live in a small house without central heating or A/C, to eat fairly humble food and rarely eat out, to replace clothes and household goods only when they wear out etc. I know of a great many hackers and artists who have made that choice, but they are very much in a minority. Most people would far rather work >~40hrs a week and benefit from the increased purchasing power. Frankly, I think that most people wouldn't gain any real life satisfaction from extra leisure time - fully half of the average American's leisure is taken up with television viewing.
I blame it on the culture. It's considered unethical to survive without working so now we need to work in order to survive. The constant push for more jobs is the biggest enemy of automation. Until we get something like a no-strings-attached minimum income we won't make the transition.
>We have the machines to make that a reality today – but none of the will.
Correction: "we" don't have the machines. Society on the whole does not collectively own the means of production, and the workers who utilize the machines are not compensated for the entirety of the value they produce. Productivity has steadily risen thanks to mechanization, and real wages did at one point tend to track more or less equally with that rise, even if the wages did not entail the entirety of the value produced. That is until the late 70s. I think the more important question is: given how well we've been doing for the past ~35 years, why is our compensation still stuck in the 70s?
The tools that allow me to be more efficient are not only available to me, but to everybody including my competitors. This results in an efficiency jump of the whole industry.
Workers don't benefit that much, because my competitors suddenly have a lot of free time to sell, which drives down prices. Me and my competitors end up working more, until our previous work/life balance and wage level is restored.
End result: Workers are more efficient, but work the same amount, and earn the same amount. Buyers benefit because they get more for less money.
One amusing thing about corporations is that they tend to keep hiring people as long as there is at least some marginal benefit (profits minus costs for that employee higher than zero) to it. Most companies I can think of could probably operate quite well at half their current head count, or with 20 or 30 hour work weeks for their existing work force. It would work. They would still make money. It just wouldn't be financially optimal.
When a machine replaces the work of a man, the value that work generates goes to the owner of the machine instead. I don't see why this would lead to less work for anyone, as the man the machine replaced still has to work to make money - until you have a universal income, or a high minimum wage, increasing automation does nothing to create less toil for the average worker.
In fact, you could argue that it's the opposite - by devaluing/automating the work that man did, you make it harder for him to make money, as whatever expertise he might have had is now worth less, leaving him to continue doing the same work for less money (as long as that might be possible) or moving to a new field and likely starting from the bottom.
Arguably it's obvious, but an optimistic vision of a future of happy idleness sells a lot better than a dystopia of near-total unemployment. What's more, the owners of newspapers and TV channels have good reason to portray machines as beneficial to everyone - after all, it's their income from the many other industries they're invested in that's being improved in.
When a machine replaces the work of a man, that man (who had the ingenuity to create a machine, say a fishnet, and take a risk) can make his products to you a lot cheaper than it otherwise would be if he had to hire tons of laborers. That is where you benefit. When the price of a car becomes reachable all of a sudden, or a tv, or plumbing, or common items like socks are $5 and not $100. The standard of living should rise through automation and increase productivity. Instead everyone is fighting for higher wages, higher protection, weaker currencies... and ever-rising prices across the board.
And what happens when enough work becomes mechanized or automated and enough people are out of jobs that it doesn't matter how low the resulting price of the product is? I call this the Wal-Mart effect. The idea is that you don't have to pay higher wages, or provide better benefits, or otherwise ensure that the increases in productivity track with increasing real wages. Because everyone can just shop at Wal-Mart!
Price of automation > Price of Chinese/Indian Labor Wages ... I think the reason we don't have things automated is because of how little companies like Walmart can get away with paying its employees.
A lot of people will look at automation as taking away jobs and thus a sort of 'immoral' pursuit. But I am not sure the average person these days has that much of a 'job' to begin with. :/ (And I mean in both terms of pay AND responsibility)
Is the morality of how humans should be treated (home, food, healthcare, etc.) distinct from how job-dense an economy is?
> Nonetheless, the workers' movement was once dedicated to the eventual abolition of all menial, tedious, grinding work. We have the machines to make that a reality today – but none of the will.
No, we do not have such machines. While we have made big strides in getting machines to do menial labor, the fact is that
1. There are huge amounts of menial labor that we simply cannot make sophisticated-enough machines to do. Humans are still necessary for many menial jobs. (If they weren't, they would have been replaced long ago with cheaper machines.) While we can land robots on mars, we still do not have the technology to, for example, clean our entire house using robotic labor. Achieving that would require solving some very hard problems in robotics, but humans can just do those types of work with hardly any training.
2. The amount of labor required keeps increasing, as the standard of living goes up. People expect more and more. We do everything we can with machine labor, but then we can get humans to do work machines cannot that further improves our quality of living, so we do that. For that reason it seems unlikely that human labor will vanish until robots can literally do everything humans can, which we are nowhere close to.
It is leading to less work. Why do you think we still haven't recovered full employment from the 2008 financial crisis?
Fewer people are working more hours. Fewer and fewer and fewer people will continue to work more and more hours. As the machines pick up the slack full employment will begin to seem almost laughable.
The problem is, that in order for the wealth to accrue to everyone - to allow everyone to survive with fewer total available jobs - we need to be redistributing the wealth that the machines create. Or else we're going to have a future with third world inequality in first world nations.
It's because of where most people assign value - consumer goods ownership. People are always going into debt for unneeded goods like that giant TV or upgraded car. These things make them feel good because society says you're a success if you have them. Very few people can look past this and get that $3k car by choice when they can afford much more. And until society puts greater social value on things like time with family this won't change and people will seek the dollar for as many hours as they reasonably can. And surely not fight for the opposite.
What I find sad is that almost every politician would say they are 'family orientated' but I never see any fighting to make sure people can spend more time with their family - the most important thing IMO. In my life I have only seen one country reduce official working hours. This was France about 10-ish years ago. This to me is the sign of an advancing society far above the TV screen size I own.
I completely agree with you. However, let's not forget the inevitability of game theory: people will always take advantage of the system for their good. France made their rules and it really did not solve the problems they were trying to solve e.g. unemployment. And a jobless family may end up worse off (family-wise) than a family whose parents work 5-10 more hours a week.
With the French example they said it didn't improve employment as they just increase output. So in a way it was a win as no-one lost and workers gained time. Personally I have seen this result in myself when I go from extended long hours back to a more normal routine, I'm just more efficient. I've seen studies saying the most efficient work hours are about 6 hours a day (I think I found on HN).
I'm not sure how you get to the jobless family being worse off... what is the logic there?
Speaking about computer science - As technology progresses so fast, it takes a lot of time to master them. By the time you master something, another technology comes along obsoleting the old one. So, this is really a long long job race - you have to keep moving learning new stuff. Otherwise, you will be branded into a specific technology (like 'ios developer', 'php coder') and there's no way getting out of it.
- Income inequality is higher than before. The rich are getting richer much faster than others.
- I don't know if people are working less on average, but I suppose so. I think I could live quite comfortable life if I worked just two or three days a week as a freelance developer.
We have to support a ravenous State that gives little in return but barriers to industry and inflation (in education and healthcare most visibly). The point is that everything should be cheaper than it is. Yet we're told deflation is such a great evil. We work but we're not productive. All these visions of the leisurely future in the article were during in the boom of capitalism, when the State really was small and unobtrusive, and the standard of living absolutely surged. It's a pity that the US has not embraced these core values in time of recession but have gone the opposite way in directing the economy. Creating jobs is not the goal. You could hire one guy to dig a hole and one to fill it and you wouldn't be any better for it. All slaves had jobs. The goal is to create efficiency, productivity, and encourage entrepreneurship and profit, for they are incentives to best serve customers. You could name too many ways that government make everyday product more expensive to 'protect' and cater to smaller segments of society.
Indeed. When a small elite control the means of production, high efficiency (less need for waged labour), means more will starve -- or have to live off welfare.
That is, unless we do something to change the system.
The work of a steveadore, one of the examples given, has been vastly automated and unionized. The work is much physically easier than before: operating a crane vs. manually moving cargo. Dockworker's unions have negotiated strong agreements related to overtime pay which guarantee time and a half. There are a far smaller number of employees needed, and those employees want to pack in as many hours as they legally can, to reap the overtime benefits. Automation of an industry can actually lead to longer hours for the fewer employees still working in the industry.
Since there are far fewer well paying positions like being a longshoreman, people who may have once gotten a job on the docks have to compete with everyone else for service jobs. The service jobs don't pay enough, so many need 2 or even 3 jobs to keep their families afloat. The need for multiple jobs explains why this class of people is working longer.
I'd say sexual selection is a cause. There is pretty much a fixed pool of potential mates. Women highly value mates who are good providers. Some of my female friends say they wouldn't date a guy who made less than them.
Thus if you are a guy and are considering cutting back on your work, you will become significantly less attractive to many females.
Due to the reasons listed above men work long hours. Women, which in many professions are the minority, must then match those hours in order to not look bad.
Why do people keep asking the question when there are obvious answers?
See Richard Wolff. I'm a broken record because it looks like this daily fluff appears once a month to talk about and forget. Healthcare is a minor point if you've been tracking costs (e.g. Costs passed onto the consumer per item, per meal, for most major fast food chains has been rising at about 5 cents a year)
The question is, to whom do the benefits of automation accrue? The utopians assumed it would be distributed equally, but we all know how it really turned out - the rich get richer.
There are some areas of the economy where work hours have been reduced, as a side effect of companies restricting the work week to avoid paying full-time benefits such as healthcare.
At the moment, we don't take responsibility for underpaid workers and we don't own the many machines that actually do a lot of work that we depend on. And also, we don't own the means of energy collection and generation. And, we don't account for non-renewable and detrimental energy use.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 129 ms ] threadBesides, wouldn’t it be just lazy to stop working and rest on the results of the sweat and pain of our forefathers? :\",
No matter what, you don't have to work 100 hours a week to survive. The fact that you choose to do so isn't saying much about you.
Assuming this is talking about Americans, that's sort of an entertaining claim, since most of the modern policy discussions have been about deciding whether or not you are allowed to survive if you don't work enough.
The minimum wage over there is $7.25. Are you really telling me that you need $3K per month to survive?
Maybe we need to take him more literally. Maybe what he means is he owes the mob a lot of money, and if he doesn't pay them $2.5k/month they will kill him?
No, it wouldn't.
Work x Leverage = Achievement
Yes, we could stop where we are, decide things are good enough, and operate the world at subsistence levels. But who's to say we aren't twenty years from doubling the efficiency of agriculture?
A hundred years ago we could have said, trains are pretty awesome, let's stop here. But then we never would have had flight.
Five hundred years ago we could have said, horse and buggy is so much better than walking, how can I get any better than this, let's stop here. But then we wouldn't have had trains.
Technological advancement has a long track record of being very good for quality of life for everyone, and it certainly hasn't stopped, so why should we stop?
Work != technological advancement.
More to the point, while good things come out of work, so do a lot of bad things. The more selective we can be about how we work, the more capable we are of filtering out the bad effects while retaining the good ones.
A set of priorities that is humanist in nature and puts quality of life before advancement would lead to greater output on both sides of the coin. We know in the case of open source and experimental hacking, for example, that a driven and intelligent person's productive capacity is enhanced by additional free time, not decreased.
Put humans first. The technology will follow, and it will be better and more sustainable technology.
I really don't see why people affix any sort of value to the amount of work they take when they should be concentrating on their results and how work aligns to their life.
I work less than 20 hours a week to finish my studies and generally speaking I do what I want, which includes reading technical literature (out of a personal desire to do so), cooking, and taking a 3 or 4-day weekend off every month to visit people and travel. I leave the stress to the difficult stuff (the studying bit) and live within my means, and the lack of anxiety or rush means my work is actually solid without spending excessive time to concentrate or get results.
I consider this my ideal lifestyle, not because I work little, but because I have a choice on how I live my life and how much effort I get to focus towards the things that I want.
There are other schooling systems, such as Stiener schools, which focus more on personal development. They form children who want to explore, then allow them to self direct what they explore. (That particular system also has many, many faults).
This is rather like 'work'. Your grandfather had to be in a factory many hours a day. You have to be in an office. Society says so. If you are the sort of person who is bad at knowledge work, you may well wish society told you to do something more physical. But the point is that you lack freedom.
The demographic of this message board is people working on, or thinking about, startups. Essentially, when you do a startup, you choose what you are spending your time doing. You trade in your job security for freedom.
I have known people 'drop out' of society, go on the dole, and work 14 hour days developing computer games that later sold for good money. Less admirably, I've known them to go on the dole, and spend all day playing computer games. They trade their place in society for freedom. This shows that in truth, modern society does give us the freedom. (in my country).
So why do people work? Or more pressingly, why do people work in jobs that do not meet their psychological needs for respect, autonomy, and purpose, and pay badly? Because they do, regardless of what you read in the papers, keep working at those jobs. My local supermarket is full of people who derive little identity from their work - I was one of them as a child and I know how the adult staff there think.
The answer, I think, is fear of what other people would think of them for scrounging. People like the post I am replying to. I think most people think like him.
He should, rationally, hate startup founders consuming someone elses money to mess about on a project that probably won't make a dime. And that contradiction is the problem. Societies attitude to work is not rational, and it forces people to keep doing jobs they don't want to that could be automated, instead of being free. Eventually, economics will destroy those jobs. A new role will be created that didn't exist before, adding even less value than the last (but the labour is there so why not use it). Those workers desperately take the work to avoid seeing themselves as scroungers, as the enemy. And their children will grow up desperate not to be free.
Yes, two centuries ago, but only very briefly. In human history, overall we work today far more than most humans that ever lived used to work. Farmers and hunter-gatherers for example had and have far more leisure time than "modern" people do (see for example "The World Until Yesterday").
I very much prefer working 40 to 50 hours/week than the above (though, case in point, I'll likely only start my first ‘real’ job this fall after 22 years of education…).
I think the main factor is that we both do more (waste time and push paper/design etc) than in the past thanks to computers. Also, many jobs are simply a function of population size, more people = more emails to send, calls to take etc.
I think if you want part time work in the UK it is easy enough to come by (engineers at many companies I know can go part time until management level if they wish) but there is a growing trend of only part time positions becoming available in some sectors and you either have to like it or lump it sadly.
Note that this holds even though (or in addition) the cost of healthcare per person in the US seems to be slightly higher than on average in the western world.
Try "considerably higher than on average in the rest of the world": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_heal...
Something more fundamental about our present economics may be at the heart of it here.... I'm no economist, but with expanding technology (Capital), diminishing demand for Labor could make for a mass prisoner's dilemma of sorts. Employees everywhere have such little negotiating room due to increasing job scarcity that they have to compete on hours worked and can't "cooperate" by working less. This seems to even hold true at the national level -- France has managed to keep most players "cooperating" (working fewer hours) but the country's economy has suffered in the global competitive landscape.
Another way to look at it could be more polarizing. The best of the new white collar class (engineers, entrepreneurs, executives, etc) has each unit of labor multiplied so significantly by the internet that there is tremendous incentive to work a lot. On the flip side, the blue collar of today -- those mentioned as call center workers, filing clerks, etc -- are just warm-blooded, more versatile machines, doing noncreative work of too little value to be worthwhile without long hours.
Now, with the benefits, like social flexibility, life expectance, and, sure, better medicine (that comes with a cost), we all live longer, entering decades we have no idea what is going to be of us. So, uncertainty, make we work harder.
Ps: as a non-native english speaker, it was very hard to deal with all those different verb tenses. I hope people can understand it...
I find myself fighting between that happy/relaxing fantasy world, and the other side which is a goal/dream to go big with a project. Though I guess there is a 3rd side which is work your ass for a company making a good salary to support yourself later, should you be injured or retired.
Anyway, I've always believed in work smart over working hard, but I think the 'work hard' mentality will take a while to shake off... but eventually robots/machines WILL do most everything and we just won't need to be employed (or everyone will have to know engineering?).
Yeah, even now I'd say working is essentially about making more money than the government will give to you through welfare programs. When/if welfare payouts increase or a basic universal income is implemented there will be less demand for jobs and people from all classes will actually begin choosing whether to work or not. I think it will be a long time before basic incomes are implemented or welfare is increased in the US though.
But we want 2013 healthcare, which is far more labor intensive. I have a herniated disk. In 1950, a doctor would spend an hour telling me I'd have to live with back pain for the rest of my life. In 2012 many doctor hours were spent on my MRIs and laparoscopic surgery. Net result is that my deadlift is now about 285 - nothing impressive, but not possible in 1951.
So the short answer is that including healthcare, we work more because we want more. Many of the things we want more of require more labor in 2013 than in 1950.
Or is it more likely that the cost has sky-rocketed out of proportion with the quality of health care (in this country or in the world) with no good reason?
The ultimate question; are you willing to give up medicine invented since 1950 in return for paying 1950's prices? I'm not.
$1 in 1970 is worth $6.02 in 2013.
I would say it would be difficult to get the same quality as you had in 1970 as health regulations have increased so it would be rather difficult to get an estimate if you could actually get the 1970 cost.
Which "health regulations" have increased the "quality" of treating a basic non-compound leg fracture since 1970? And which "health regulations" does the US alone have that uniquely increase its costs?
I also think it is deeply engrained in our instincts that idleness is bad. If we don't keep reasonably busy in ways that result in feelings of accomplishment, we eventually become unhappy and depressed. We as a species are driven to work, as it has always been necessary for our survival.
I think that the key explanation is very simple - our expectations increase with our income, creating a ratchet of consumption. There is a very good body of research showing that people feel the benefit of increased consumption only briefly, and that they feel the effects of a loss far more acutely than the effects of an equivalent gain. We also tend to value our relative status far more highly than our absolute status - "keeping up with the Joneses" is a very powerful drive. We tend to feel worse about ourselves if the people around us are becoming relatively wealthier, even if our absolute living standards have not diminished at all.
The great post-war promise of the leisure society could easily be realised if we maintained post-war standards of living. It's not very expensive to live in a small house without central heating or A/C, to eat fairly humble food and rarely eat out, to replace clothes and household goods only when they wear out etc. I know of a great many hackers and artists who have made that choice, but they are very much in a minority. Most people would far rather work >~40hrs a week and benefit from the increased purchasing power. Frankly, I think that most people wouldn't gain any real life satisfaction from extra leisure time - fully half of the average American's leisure is taken up with television viewing.
Correction: "we" don't have the machines. Society on the whole does not collectively own the means of production, and the workers who utilize the machines are not compensated for the entirety of the value they produce. Productivity has steadily risen thanks to mechanization, and real wages did at one point tend to track more or less equally with that rise, even if the wages did not entail the entirety of the value produced. That is until the late 70s. I think the more important question is: given how well we've been doing for the past ~35 years, why is our compensation still stuck in the 70s?
Workers don't benefit that much, because my competitors suddenly have a lot of free time to sell, which drives down prices. Me and my competitors end up working more, until our previous work/life balance and wage level is restored.
End result: Workers are more efficient, but work the same amount, and earn the same amount. Buyers benefit because they get more for less money.
In fact, you could argue that it's the opposite - by devaluing/automating the work that man did, you make it harder for him to make money, as whatever expertise he might have had is now worth less, leaving him to continue doing the same work for less money (as long as that might be possible) or moving to a new field and likely starting from the bottom.
Ever-decreasing prices are not a panacea.
http://www.zpub.com/notes/idle.html
It's a piece written in 1932, but that finds a surprising echo in these modern times.
A lot of people will look at automation as taking away jobs and thus a sort of 'immoral' pursuit. But I am not sure the average person these days has that much of a 'job' to begin with. :/ (And I mean in both terms of pay AND responsibility)
Is the morality of how humans should be treated (home, food, healthcare, etc.) distinct from how job-dense an economy is?
No, we do not have such machines. While we have made big strides in getting machines to do menial labor, the fact is that
1. There are huge amounts of menial labor that we simply cannot make sophisticated-enough machines to do. Humans are still necessary for many menial jobs. (If they weren't, they would have been replaced long ago with cheaper machines.) While we can land robots on mars, we still do not have the technology to, for example, clean our entire house using robotic labor. Achieving that would require solving some very hard problems in robotics, but humans can just do those types of work with hardly any training.
2. The amount of labor required keeps increasing, as the standard of living goes up. People expect more and more. We do everything we can with machine labor, but then we can get humans to do work machines cannot that further improves our quality of living, so we do that. For that reason it seems unlikely that human labor will vanish until robots can literally do everything humans can, which we are nowhere close to.
Fewer people are working more hours. Fewer and fewer and fewer people will continue to work more and more hours. As the machines pick up the slack full employment will begin to seem almost laughable.
The problem is, that in order for the wealth to accrue to everyone - to allow everyone to survive with fewer total available jobs - we need to be redistributing the wealth that the machines create. Or else we're going to have a future with third world inequality in first world nations.
What I find sad is that almost every politician would say they are 'family orientated' but I never see any fighting to make sure people can spend more time with their family - the most important thing IMO. In my life I have only seen one country reduce official working hours. This was France about 10-ish years ago. This to me is the sign of an advancing society far above the TV screen size I own.
I'm not sure how you get to the jobless family being worse off... what is the logic there?
- I don't know if people are working less on average, but I suppose so. I think I could live quite comfortable life if I worked just two or three days a week as a freelance developer.
That is, unless we do something to change the system.
The work of a steveadore, one of the examples given, has been vastly automated and unionized. The work is much physically easier than before: operating a crane vs. manually moving cargo. Dockworker's unions have negotiated strong agreements related to overtime pay which guarantee time and a half. There are a far smaller number of employees needed, and those employees want to pack in as many hours as they legally can, to reap the overtime benefits. Automation of an industry can actually lead to longer hours for the fewer employees still working in the industry.
Since there are far fewer well paying positions like being a longshoreman, people who may have once gotten a job on the docks have to compete with everyone else for service jobs. The service jobs don't pay enough, so many need 2 or even 3 jobs to keep their families afloat. The need for multiple jobs explains why this class of people is working longer.
Thus if you are a guy and are considering cutting back on your work, you will become significantly less attractive to many females.
Due to the reasons listed above men work long hours. Women, which in many professions are the minority, must then match those hours in order to not look bad.
See Richard Wolff. I'm a broken record because it looks like this daily fluff appears once a month to talk about and forget. Healthcare is a minor point if you've been tracking costs (e.g. Costs passed onto the consumer per item, per meal, for most major fast food chains has been rising at about 5 cents a year)
There are some areas of the economy where work hours have been reduced, as a side effect of companies restricting the work week to avoid paying full-time benefits such as healthcare.
At the moment, we don't take responsibility for underpaid workers and we don't own the many machines that actually do a lot of work that we depend on. And also, we don't own the means of energy collection and generation. And, we don't account for non-renewable and detrimental energy use.