Concerns around the loss of jobs to new technology dates back to the Industrial Revolution and the machine-smashing riots led by “Luddites”. Workers at the time were right to revolt. The initial effect of the factory system was not only to destroy the cottage industry of handloom weaving but to drastically increase the hours and intensity of work. Average working time in Britain reached nearly 70 hours a week in the early 19th century, with some factory workers doing as much as 12 hours a day, six days a week.
But from the middle of the 19th century to the late 20th century, the benefits of technological progress were reflected in steadily reducing hours of work.
I don’t think working hours went up at the IR.
Market working hours – working for The Man for pay – definitely went up for males at the IR, yes. But when we consider total household hoursw, no I think they fell. Because hand spinning took hundreds and hundreds of annual hours for every woman. And the first automated task? Spinning. I think female household working hours fell so much that total household hours, both in the market and in the household, fell.
By 1980, the Australian Council of Trade Unions launched a push for a 35-hour working week. But the balance of power had changed, with unions much weaker, and governments, both Labor and Liberal, taking the side of employers. Standard hours were reduced to 38 per week, where they have stayed ever since. Annual leave, increased to four weeks under the Whitlam government, has also remained unchanged.
Forty to 50 years later, these conditions have been in place so long that they seem like the natural order of things. As a result, discussions of the impact of AI take for granted that any reduction in total hours worked translates directly into a loss of jobs.
But household hours have continued to fall and leisure hours to rise over this period. It is only market working hours that have been stuck. You know, like at the IR itself.
There’s little doubt now that AI will produce real productivity improvements. But there’s no guarantee that most of us will share the benefits of these improvements. A return to the long-paused process of gradual reductions in working hours is urgently needed.
Ah, but that’s a bad idea too. Assume AI increases productivity. We all therefore face a choie. Get richer on the same hours of work or be sa rich sa ew are on fewer. So, some will choose one, some the other. Pretty normal, some do, some don’t. But JQ here is insisting that everyone must take his choice – fewer market working hours. And, you know, some might prefer to do more market working hours, buy more kit to automate household working hours and gain their increased leisure that way. You know, maybe? But they can’t, ‘coz JQ says so.
Very liberal, that….