The Intensifying Conflict between American Workers and Technological Advancements

The Intensifying Conflict between American Workers and Technological Advancements



American workers⁢ v technological progress: the battle heats up

For more than 200 years Luddites have received ⁣bad press—worse‌ even than the British Members of Parliament who voted in 1812 to put to death convicted machine-breakers. Yet even at the time, the aggrieved weavers won popular sympathy, ⁢including ⁢that of Lord ​Byron. ‌In an “Ode to Framers of the Frame ⁣Bill” the poet wrote: “Some folks for certain have thought it was shocking/ ⁣When Famine appeals, ⁢and when Poverty groans/ That life should be valued at less than a stocking/ ⁣And breaking of frames lead ‌to breaking of ​bones.” He used his maiden ⁢speech in ⁣the ‌House of Lords to ​urge for a mixture of “conciliation and firmness” in dealing with ‌the mob, rather​ than lopping off‍ its “superfluous heads.”

Once again, technological⁢ upheaval is rife and there is ‍a widespread feeling, ⁣even among the patrician classes, that​ the old ways are in danger of being trampled under foot by the march of progress. ‌In ⁤America two big labour disputes—one looming, the ⁤other well under way—are, among other things, ​grappling with‍ potentially seismic transformations caused by decarbonisation and artificial intelligence (AI).

The United Auto Workers (UAW) union, representing employees of Ford, General Motors and Stellantis (maker of Chrysler and Fiat), is threatening a​ strike when labour ‌contracts end on September 14th. As well as​ fighting for sharply‌ higher pay, one of its goals ‌is ⁣to extend wages and other benefits offered in conventional car ⁢manufacturing to people working on electric vehicles‌ (EVs), the production of which typically⁤ uses more robots and fewer blue-collar workers. Over in Hollywood, writers and actors are‍ at an impasse with studios over pay and conditions​ in the streaming era, a dispute that has ‍been muddied by the vexing⁢ question of how AI will reshape ⁣the industry if new tools can be used‌ to write scripts‌ or simulate‌ actors. Such struggles may well shape ​how workers ⁣in other industries view the…

2023-08-15 ⁣10:19:17
Original from www.economist.com
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