Robots Will Make the Need for Immigrants More Urgent Than Ever

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It's so easily forgotten that people aren’t a cost. They’re an input, always and everywhere, and this truth won’t lose any validity as robots proliferate. Quite the opposite.

Which is why it’s useful to respond to Manhattan Institute (MI) president Reihan Salam’s recent observation in the form of a question about immigration in an opinion piece he penned. Salam asked “If the classic case for openness to low-skill immigration is that newcomers do the jobs that Americans won’t do, what happens when robots can do them instead?” Salam could perhaps be persuaded to rethink his question. Or withdraw it altogether? Think about it.

Precisely because AI and “robots” are poised to brilliantly and beautifully erase all manner of work done at all levels of the proverbial work food chain, jobs that Americans can’t not do are set to explode in both variety and number. As argued in my 2018 book The End of Work, and in countless op-eds since, jobs aren’t finite precisely because we haven’t scratched the surface when it comes to meeting the needs of humans, and of much greater importance, leading the needs of humans.

Which means that if and when AI and robots live up to even a fraction of their job destroying potential, work that much more tessellates with the unique skills and intelligence of every American will soar in quality and amount. As predicted in the book, Americans will paradoxically work more than ever while working less than ever. Shorter work weeks for sure, but since work will increasingly be a reflection of what we’re passionate about, Americans will be working even when they’re not, including while on vacations that will grow in length and extravagance.

Too optimistic for you? That’s fine. The future is opaque.

Just the same, these predictions lose none of their potency vis-à-vis Salam. Assuming robots “take” the jobs formerly done by allegedly “low-skilled” immigrants as he predicts they will, the latter won’t shrink the need for individuals living south of the U.S. border. Not a bit.

That’s because automation of tasks formerly done by humans is the picture-definition of economic growth. Translated, it’s productivity. And the soaring productivity born of robots and automation will by its very name produce wealth on a level that will make the present appear impoverished by comparison.

The result will be all sorts of new and high-end jobs that will not remotely resemble the work of the present, but that Americans will have to have. Work for them will be a routine expression of charismatic passion rooted in potential finally realized. The other side of the previous coin will be endless amounts of work that has fewer or no takers. Crucial about the work that the high-skilled, U.S. born will not do in the future, it will be of the higher-productivity kind (think much higher pay) that will make it even more urgent for the supposedly low-skilled to bring their talents to the U.S.

The migration of human beings is the purest market signal on earth, and nothing else comes close. Looked at through Salam’s analysis, if robots have the potential to do all that the MI president expects, opportunity stateside will be much greater, and much more remunerative than ever. The need for more people will soar.

People once again aren’t a cost, and jobs aren’t finite. Instead, people create work by dividing it in greater amounts not just with other humans, but machines. Contra Salam, the need for “low-skilled” labor from south of the border will be more urgent than ever the more that AI and robots live up to their undeniable potential.
John Tamny is editor of RealClearMarkets, President of the Parkview Institute, a senior fellow at the Market Institute, and a senior economic adviser to Applied Finance Advisors (www.appliedfinance.com). His next book is The Deficit Delusion: Why Everything Left, Right and Supply Side Tell You About the National Debt Is Wrong.
 
Americans will absolutely do those jobs just not at the depressed wages that have been caused by the unchecked importation of no skill illegals has caused.
Yet nobody seems to want to do the thing that would have the greatest impact on that and go after companies that hire illegals and punish them severely enough that they willingly stop hiring illegals. Nobody's going to go illegally enter a country they can't survive in. Stop giving them money, stop giving them jobs and punish anyone that gives them a job or money. Literally everything from a big factory farm hiring a thousand illegal vegetable pickers to the homeowner that hires an illegal Mexican to mow their lawn. Punish them all. Make the idea of hiring an illegal immigrant so risky and monetarily not worth it that they just don't. As it is there's no incentive to not hire illegals and therefore plenty of incentive to risk a bunch of bullshit to sneak into America.
 
Only if the robots that are being built have the capability to strangle immigrants to death.
 
Yuh huh. Okay, let's play this one out, kiwis.

1. Burgertron 9000 is built.
2. Jamal the minimum wage burger-flipper is laid off.
3. Jamal goes on to... what? The author seems to posit that Jamal will go forth to a fulfilling, better-paying career. I would argue that anyone with the inspiration and drive to not work at a fucking McDonalds would already not be a burger-flipper and that Jamal is more likely to go on to a lifetime of watching youtube, jerking off, and smoking weed until the money runs out, at which point the turn to crime will occur.
4. "But the robots will do everything so we won't need to work!" - An Idiot. McDonalds replaced Jamal with Burgertron to save money. They are not then going to turn around and hand out free money to support the now-unemployed burger-flipper, as they would not then be saving money. For us to reach the stage of an automated utopia would require a nigh-inconceivable level of advancement in technology; until the robots can build cities and perform surgery and all of the complex technical things that requires high level engineering, we still need humans to work, which requires an economy and all of its trappings. People in favor of the universal basic income speak up here, but again, where does that money come from? Burgertron is not generating labor above and beyond a human, it simply replaced a human. No object of value sufficient to support Jamal's unemployed ass is being created by Burgertron in excess of what Jamal was already doing.
 
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