The only
possible output of this system is extortion as a way of life.
As
the accompanying chart shows, productivity in the U.S. has been declining since
the early 2000s. This trend mystifies economists, as the tremendous
investments in software, robotics, networks and mobile computing would be
expected to boost productivity, as these tools enable every individual who
knows how to use them to produce more value.
One theory holds that the workforce has not yet learned how to
use these tools, an idea that arose in the 1980s to explain the decline in
productivity even as personal computers, desktop publishing, etc. entered the
mainstream.
A related explanation holds that institutions and corporations
are not deploying the new technologies very effectively for a variety of
reasons: the cost of integrating legacy systems, insufficient training of their
workforce, and hasty, ill-planned investments in mobile platforms that don't
actually yield higher productivity.
Productivity
matters because producing more value with every unit of energy, every tool and
every hour of labor is the foundation of higher wages, profits, taxes and
general prosperity.
I
have four theories about the secular decline in productivity, and
all are difficult to model and back up with data, as they are inherently
ambiguous and hard to quantify.
1. Mobile telephony and social media distract workers so
significantly and ubiquitously that the work being produced has declined per
worker/per hour of paid labor.
2. Public and private institutions have become grossly
inefficient and ineffective, soaking up any gains in productivity via their
wasteful processes and institutionalized incompetence.
3. Our institutions have substituted signaling and compliance
for productivity.
4. The financial elites at the top of our neofeudal economy have
optimized protecting their skims and scams above all else; their focus is
rigging the system in their favor and so productivity is of no concern to them.
Other commentators have noted the drain on productivity as
workers constantly check their mobile phones and social media accounts--up to
400 times a day is average for many people.
"Addicted" is a loaded word, so let's simply note the
enormous "able-to-focus-without-interruptions" gap between those who
only answer phone calls and limit social media to a few minutes per day in the
evening during off-work time, and those who are distracted hundreds of times
throughout the day.
Some tasks can be interrupted without much loss of productivity,
but most knowledge-worker type tasks are decimated by this sort of constant
distraction--even though the distracted worker will naturally claim that their
productivity is unharmed.
The
list of public institutions that now demand absurd wait times for minimal or
even defective service keeps growing. The California Dept. of
Motor Vehicles (DMV) now soaks up to eight hours of waiting to complete mundane
tasks. Employees have been caught napping for hours, and customers waiting for
service note the lines finally start moving in the last half-hour of the day
when the employees are motivated to process the people in line so they can go
home.
The other public-sector systems are equally Kafkaesque; building
permits that once took hours to process now take months, and so on. In the
private sector, it's becoming increasingly difficult to fix problems created by
the corporations themselves: multiple phone calls, long wait times, etc.
The
core dynamic is that public institutions and corporate cartels lack any
mechanisms to enforce transparency and accountability; there
is no competitive pressure on the DMV or courts, and essentially zero
competitive pressure on monopolies such as Facebook and Google and cartels such
as the big healthcare insurers.
The
only possible output of this system is extortion as a way of life: we
make you wait, we make you pay more for a poor quality service, we make you
comply with useless regulations, we make you use buggy, bloated software, and
so on.
Quasi-monopolies
like Microsoft and Apple force tens of millions of users to re-learn new
versions of software, detracting from productivity rather than enhancing it,
despite their claims. Other types of planned obsolescence are equally destructive.
With no mechanisms in place to enforce accountability and
efficiency, there is no accountability or efficiency. And so these monopolies
and cartels can be as wasteful, inefficient and unaccountable as they want.
Compliance
is a productivity killer. Doctors and nurses no longer have
enough time to serve patients because compliance now soaks up so much of their
time.
Signaling,
like compliance, is a productivity killer. The entire
trillion-dollar system of higher education doesn't measure or reward learning
or the acquisition of knowledge; the diploma / credential signals that
the student dutifully navigated the bureaucracy and thus is signaling their
readiness to be a corporate/government drone in another bureaucracy. That they
learned next to nothing is of no concern to the system. (If learning was the
goal, we'd accredit the student, not the institution.)
If we look at the economy as a whole, we find it is dominated by
monopolies and cartels, public and private. No wonder overall productivity is
declining: there are no feedback loops or mechanisms to enforce transparency,
accountability or pressures to improve efficiency and productivity gains on
these neofeudal, extortionist structures.
Back to
School Book Sale: 57% off the Kindle edition and 25% off the print edition
of The Nearly Free University and the Emerging Economy ($2.99
Kindle, $15 print)
My new book Money and Work Unchained is now $6.95 for the Kindle ebook and $15 for the print edition.
My new book Money and Work Unchained is now $6.95 for the Kindle ebook and $15 for the print edition.
Read the first section for free
in PDF format.
If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.
If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.