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The Almighty Buck IT Politics Technology

California's $15-an-Hour Minimum Wage May Spur Automation (computerworld.com) 940

An anonymous readers links to an article on ComputerWorld: For many California business groups, the state's decision to gradually raise its minimum wage to $15 by 2022 is a terrible thing. But for its technology industry, it may be a plus. Higher wages, says the California Restaurant Association, will force businesses to face "undesirable" options, including cutting staff, raising prices and adopting automation. But a higher minimum wage will "signal to tech companies and entrepreneurs" to look at the restaurant industry, said Darren Tristano, president of Technomic, a research group focused on the restaurant industry. The state's governor and legislators reached an agreement Monday to raise the wages. "I think there are a lot of tech companies that are looking at the restaurant industry to accelerate their growth," said Tristano. The restaurant industry is primed for change, said Tristano, "Many of the routines that take place in restaurants are not very different from 30 to 40 years ago," he said.
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California's $15-an-Hour Minimum Wage May Spur Automation

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  • by May this year.
    • by Striek ( 1811980 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:32PM (#51815125)

      But then again, it may not...

      Here in Ontario, Canada, we raised the minimum wage from $10.25 to $11.00, and unemployment went down in the following months and year, from around 7.5 %to 6.75% (source [thestar.com]). While that doesn't prove that minimum wage increases never result in unemployment rises, it does disprove that they always result in unemployment rises.

      Minimum wage increases killing jobs is a ridiculous notion - prices can always raise as well, and besides, the naysayers repeat this line almost Every. Single. Time. - even for overdue inflation-indexed increases, which generally casts doubt on their positions. In reality, it's a lot more complicated than that.

      I will never understand why minimum wage is not tied to inflation rates - this is a ridiculous argument to have Every Five Years.

      http://www.thenation.com/artic... [thenation.com]
      http://www.thestar.com/busines... [thestar.com]
      https://www.weforum.org/agenda... [weforum.org]

      • by harrkev ( 623093 ) <kevin.harrelson@ ... om minus painter> on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:44PM (#51815269) Homepage

        To be fair, a wage hike of $0.75 (Canadian) is not really comparable to a $5.00 (US dollars) wage hike.

        One constitutes less than an 8% raise, while the other is a 50% raise.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:49PM (#51815351)

          To be fair, the california hike is actually five one-dollar/hour hike a year apart.

        • It is a 50% raise over the 6 next years! That would mean about a 8.2% increase per year. That is faster than inflation but considering the minimum wage has gone from,

          • 2002 : 6.75
          • 2007 : 7.50 (11.1 percent increase in 5 years)
          • 2008 : 8.00 (6.7 percent increase in 1 year)
          • 2014 : 9.00 (12.5 percent increase in 6 years)
          • 2016 : 10.00 (11.5 percent increase in 2 years)

          California has been fairly good in increase the minimum wage but it most yea

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:51PM (#51815373)

        Look at the old US car makers who refused to let the government force them to provide cars that were safer and got better gas mileage.

        They fought the regulations, refused to comply, sued and delayed, and eventually got their market taken away by car makers who provided all of those benefits in less expensive vehicles

        At which point, the manufacturers tried to blame it all on the unions without considering their own recalcitrant behavior

        Yeah, they can all suck it, we see through their bs for the lies that it is

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:56PM (#51815439)

        Minimum wage increases killing jobs is a ridiculous notion - prices can always raise as well

        Not true. You can't just arbitrarily raise prices when there are substitute goods available. Fast food is labor intensive. If the price goes up, more people will cook at home or purchase low-labor pre-packaged food at grocery stores (using the self-checkout line).

        California already has a much higher minimum wage than the rest of the nation. If you go in a McDonalds in California, you don't see teenagers working there. You see adults, since the pay is enough to attract them. Adults are more productive than teenagers, so you need fewer of them. So California has removed an important rung on the economic ladder, by turning entry level jobs into permanent no-skill "careers" flipping burgers. This effect is worst in minority neighborhoods which already have extremely high teenage unemployment.

        • by Striek ( 1811980 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @04:01PM (#51817695)

          While I agree that this is an undesirable side effect of raising the minimum wage in some (or many?) circumstances, I also at the same time disagree with the idea that wages should be kept low (and in some cases well below the poverty line) simply to provide employment. By your argument, the result of this minimum wage hike is that McDonald's now has more productive workers at the expense of lesser skilled workers being more often unemployed. I see that as a zero-gain, but also zero-loss, proposition.

          Now while your point that it removes an important rung on the economic ladder is at least in some (or again, many?) cases true, I tend towards my more capitalistic opinions - that wages should not be kept low simply to provide employment to the unskilled. There should be a wage floor that allows unskilled workers to consume baskets of goods, not merely subsist on them. For the record, I am currently unemployed, have been for a year, and live on a shoestring budget. 90% of my expenses are tax-free, give or take. Things like groceries, diapers, medications, rent, all of it is tax-free in most modern societies. Raise the minimum wage for my wife, and we'll have more money for luxuries, or at least, for taxable consumer goods, returning nearly all of that to the economy rather than a savings account or investment fund, and also returning more of it to government coffers.

          Without minimum wage legislation, the market will tend towards indentured servitude (I know, that's a rather poignant term to use). I would rather see poverty level wages eliminated entirely, and a corresponding rise in unemployment, than see subsistence level wages proliferated. If that means I pay more for my Big Macs, I'm all for it. There is a reason I don't shop at WalMart, and don't buy clothing made in Bangladesh. I want the people who manufacture and sell my consumer goods to be capable of supporting a family. It's why I buy my coffee from Starbucks - they pay well (decently, at least, at least in Canada). I for one am happy to see more productive, and hopefully better paid, workers at McDonalds, knowing that the people working there can afford to feed a family. If that means higher unemployment, that is a sacrifice I am willing to make.

          I suppose it all boils down to this - I'd rather see fewer better paying jobs than more lesser paying jobs (grammar, ugh...).

      • by twotacocombo ( 1529393 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:59PM (#51815473)

        Here in Ontario, Canada, we raised the minimum wage from $10.25 to $11.00

        That's about a 7% increase. We're talking a 50% increase here. The company I work for relies heavily on minimum wage-ish laborers for the manufacturing jobs, which are basically screwing caps on bottles, putting them in boxes. Real unskilled stuff, diploma and English not required. We're in Los Angeles, and when they announced the minimum wage hike, eyes immediately pointed just over the border to Ventura County, where no such increase was proposed. Now that this is looking to be a state-wide thing, a 50% increase in labor costs for the bulk of our production workers is going to make the automated fillers and cappers pretty much sell themselves. Either way it goes, it's going to drive the price per unit up. Labor isn't the main cost for producing products here, but when we price out to the tenth of a cent per unit, and we roll off hundreds of thousands of units per run, it begins to add up. This cost will either be passed on to the customer, or more likely, will lose us business as clients take their filling operations to states with lower labor costs and less distance to their distribution houses. Most of our min-wage laborers are day workers, so if there's no work, they don't show up or get paid. If work starts disappearing, the $15/hr doesn't mean a damn thing to them, and ultimately the whole scheme will hurt the very people it's supposedly helping.

      • I will never understand why minimum wage is not tied to inflation rates - this is a ridiculous argument to have Every Five Years.

        Because it gives politicians something they can brag about to their constituents.

    • Funny... but that does bring up the subject of how quickly such automation would go into effect.

      Call day 0 the day the law goes into effect.

      By day 1, all businesses that have not started up yet, or who have grown enough to start hiring employees, will probably start looking very hard at adding automation to their list of things to implement, even on a small scale. Consider that some of this is in place now; at the Apple Store, there is no checkout counter, because nearly every employee on the floor is not o

      • On the other hand, some (a lot?) of people now have 50% more purchasing power, and money is moving around way more than before. Which, if I'm not mistaken, will generate demand, which will generate jobs...

        Way too many people nowadays believe that jobs come from letting (financial) business have a lots of money, while in the real world the jobs come from tasks that need to be done -- a.k.a. demand.
        • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
          I think way to many people forget where that extra $5 is going to come from: higher prices. This is the definition and cause of inflation. Someone gets more pay, the prices go up, everything nets out to be the same.

          The other thing I'm concerned about is what happens to everyone else's pay. Will they guy that's now making $15/hour (like the EMTS, construction workers, etc.) now get $20? Wouldn't they expect that? What about the guy/gal that's now making $25? And so on. In the end you get nothing bu
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by evilRhino ( 638506 )
            This argument was addressed and debunked by Adam Smith when he invented economics. The argument that higher wages causes inflation isn't really true, because that cost is spread out over the production of the employee. Inflation is caused by more by companies taking excessive profits since the increased cost multiplies as their production goes down the supply chain.
        • On the other hand, some (a lot?) of people now have 50% more purchasing power, and money is moving around way more than before. Which, if I'm not mistaken, will generate demand, which will generate jobs...

          Way too many people nowadays believe that jobs come from letting (financial) business have a lots of money, while in the real world the jobs come from tasks that need to be done -- a.k.a. demand.

          Exactly this. Where do businesses expect to sell their products if too few people make enough money to buy them?

  • Sounds good. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kenja ( 541830 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:03PM (#51814829)
    The goal of any advanced civilization should be 100% unemployment and automation.
    • Why would the machine owners want to keep the others alive ?
      • Re:Sounds good. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by guises ( 2423402 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:22PM (#51814995)
        Obviously, they don't. Why would the others want to allow the machine owners to continue owning those machines?
        • Re:Sounds good. (Score:4, Insightful)

          by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:43PM (#51815265)

          Obviously, they don't. Why would the others want to allow the machine owners to continue owning those machines?

          The greatest labor saving device in history is the washer/dryer. Would you allow your neighbor to own one?

          Why do you think that only "the rich" will own labor saving machines? Most middle class people own some sort of computer, a washer/dryer, a microwave, etc. 3D printers are already under $500, and multiple families could share one. A food growing robot for you backyard shouldn't cost more than $1000 in parts (the rest is software and other NRE).

          An automated fast food restaurant will not need workers, but it will also mean much lower costs, which in a competitive market will mean much lower prices for consumers.

          Throughout history, rapid technological change has caused temporary disruption, but in the end, has resulted in broadly higher standards of living for nearly everyone.

      • Self interest.

        Those that have always have more to lose and less to gain than those that don't have. History has shown what happens when the latter get pushed past the breaking point. It's usually messy and ends the lives of some of those that really had a lot to lose.

    • You're absolutely wrong. But not for the reasons you think.

      People need a purpose in life, and that is "Work". Without purpose, you'll see the same things as what is happening in Ghettos today, people with no purpose, no meaning in life, trying to build meaning in harmful ways (gangs, drugs ...)

      The amount of self worth is directly attributed to the work we do. Which is why, I tell people to find jobs they actually enjoy doing.

      • Re:Sounds good. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:27PM (#51815069) Journal
        ..and you're absolutely right. People do need a purpose, and without something productive like work, they tend to do destructive things as often as not. There is an old saying: "Idle hands are the devils' playthings", and it's 100% correct. Bored people end up doing stupid and destructive things (not ALL people, but enough for it to be an issue). If we lived in some so-called 'utopia' where nobody had to work and machines did every needful thing, we'd have utter chaos, as the billions found themselves bored stiff and getting into trouble.
        • Re:Sounds good. (Score:5, Informative)

          by cyber-vandal ( 148830 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:36PM (#51815173) Homepage

          People would spend time doing what they wanted to do which could include art, literature, sport, playing video games, learning a language, studying science, travelling and many other things. Things that people can't do now due to financial restrictions. I'd love to spend my days playing soccer, lifting weights, learning Spanish, playing guitar, yoga and many other things. At the moment I have a full-time job so I can only devote a small amount of time relatively speaking to some of those things above. If I live long enough to retire I'm going to be doing at least the less strenuous of the abovementioned.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            But the real world shows that a large majority of people wouldn't do that. Let's just look at education. Education is free through high school. Yet many people (in some places the majority) waste this opportunity to spend every day 9 months a year learning for free. They would rather engage in non-productive activities. At the Community College level the prices are very low and in some states also free. Yet still there are many people who would rather sit at home drawing free money rather than take advantag

          • Re:Sounds good. (Score:5, Interesting)

            by mileshigh ( 963980 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @01:16PM (#51815659)

            Sounds good in theory, but look around any retirement home for a strong counterexample. You'll see a lot more people watching TV than painting, writing books, studying, etc. Yes, they're old, but that's not why they're vegging out. It's because they're people. It's often been said that most people start dying the minute they retire.

          • Re:Sounds good. (Score:5, Interesting)

            by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @01:25PM (#51815787) Journal
            Cyber-Vandal, you need to watch a movie called Idiocracy, it's the world we'd end up with if people didn't have any real purpose in life. Maybe a single-digit percentage would do as you suggest; the rest would fritter away their lives doing nothing of value to anyone, getting fat, weak, sickly, dumb in the head, and/or getting into one kind of trouble or another. Humans need something to fight for, and when there's nothing to fight for, we wither away and die.
      • Re:Sounds good. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <`gameboyrmh' `at' `gmail.com'> on Thursday March 31, 2016 @01:44PM (#51816057) Journal

        Why would people who have no need to work and have everything provided for them act like your stereotypical ghetto inhabitants, when that doesn't match their situation at all? In the ghetto people have nothing provided for them and a desperate need to work (to meet basic necessities) but no opportunity to do so.

        Instead maybe you should look at trust fund babies. They have everything provided for them and no need to work. They pursue creative and philanthropic pursuits and enjoy themselves with leisure activity, and mostly don't get into trouble.

        Also I pity you, that you have no meaning in life other than to work. For most people (including myself) work reduces meaning in their life, which they derive from non-work interests. Very few are paid to do what they enjoy, and most do what they enjoy without being paid. But you wouldn't. That sounds like severe depression in fact.

    • The goal of any advanced civilization should be 100% unemployment and automation.

      Sounds like an idealistic notion from a brilliant individual who never looked up from a fucking book long enough to actually notice anything useful about the civilization around them...

    • It's not the point of a business to "care for" those who cannot contribute.

      Businesses are (theoretically) about efficiency; they will seek the most efficient solution to the problem.

      If some socialists are successfully able to sell the bread & circuses idea that the government should mandate they be paid more (despite their complete replaceability) don't expect business to put on their sympathy hat and decide "oh well".

      If a person costs $15/hour ($30k/year, plus unpredictable sick days, plus harassment l

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:04PM (#51814835)

    No matter what "minimum" is dictated by statists? I'm shocked, shocked!

  • Restaurants (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:04PM (#51814847) Journal
    I don't know about anyone else, but if I go to a real sit-down restaurant, I want an actual human server, not a robot or some other form of 'automation', and I sure as heck don't want a robot or some automation preparing my food, either. If that was my only other choice then I'd just as soon stay home and cook my own food.
    • That's all fine and well. I don't think waiters are getting replaced by robots in the near future, too much dexterity and flexibility required. Although, be prepared to pay though the nose for the food you used to think was affordable due to the wage hike.

      • Re:Restaurants (Score:5, Insightful)

        by sjames ( 1099 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:12PM (#51814909) Homepage Journal

        Yes, each meal might have to cost an extra $0.30 to pay the waitstaff properly. Boo Hoo Hoo.

      • Re:Restaurants (Score:4, Informative)

        by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:15PM (#51814943) Journal
        I don't go out to eat at a sit-down restaurant to save money, I do it because I don't feel like cooking, or don't feel like eating something fast and cheap (and lower quality), or just to treat myself to something I normally wouldn't eat. If I want to save money then I stay home and cook for myself.
        • What if fast and cheap was better than slow and expensive, because you can upgrade all the "food" by replacing the "people" (soylent Green comment here) that serves it? And you don't risk getting "Mel's" armpit hair in your burger as a bonus!

          • by thaylin ( 555395 )

            You cannot upgrade the food though. The reason the food, atleast at this time, can be automate is because it is cheap prepackaged food.

      • Re:Restaurants (Score:5, Insightful)

        by acoustix ( 123925 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:16PM (#51814949)

        Robots aren't needed.

        Menus will be replaced with touchscreens. All orders will be automated. Replace a waitstaff of 15 will a serving staff of 3.

        • Those tableside kiosks really drag down the ambiance of a joint with their blinking flash games.
          I imagine those touchscreens are an absolute horrorshow during cold & flu season.

          Chili's / Ziosk, I'm looking at you.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          This happened decades ago in Japan. Many restaurants have a vending machine by the door. The select your food, pay the machine and it dispenses a ticket. You sit at a counter that is right in front of the kitchen, and the cook prepares and serves your food directly to you.

      • What "through the nose" might look like at a US restaurant that pays their people $15 an hour right now:

        https://www.ivars.com/locations/acres-of-clams

        Funny, that's not crazy at all. And tipping is optional there.

    • and I sure as heck don't want a robot or some automation preparing my food, either.

      Will you be inspecting the kitchen area, then ?

    • Re:Restaurants (Score:5, Interesting)

      by LifesABeach ( 234436 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:09PM (#51814883) Homepage
      You say that now, but most of the food you eat at a restaurant is already prepared by machines. And when a machine can serve, it will show up.
      • Oh gee I'm sorry I didn't realize that they don't just have an open fire in the kitchen and are using sticks and rocks to prepare my food. There is a difference between 'a human using some kitchen machinery/gadgetry to prepare a meal' and 'a completely robotic kitchen preparing food without any human oversight/intervention', which is what I don't want. Again: If I go out to a sit-down restaurant, I want human chefs/cooks/servers, not robots or 'automation'. If that's all I'm going to get going out then I'll
      • by mikael ( 484 )

        Spaghetti and all types of pasta - manufactured by machines, pasta gets squeezed through various shaped nozzles and turned into shapes. Bolognaise - made from mince which in turn is made from meat that has been automatically sliced up. Other items are canned automatically. Ordering of cooking ingredients used by the kitchen is done through electronic systems. The payment of meals is done automatically through the banking system. Some restaurants have the wireless credit card readers. Ordering of meals can

    • by Notorious G ( 4223193 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:16PM (#51814947)
      If you want human service staff, be prepared to pay the premium for that. Some people, like you, will desire it and to get that kind of personal, custom service, won't be as cheap as what you can get from a machine.
    • Re:Restaurants (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:18PM (#51814961)

      "I don't know about anyone else, but if I go to a real sit-down restaurant, I want an actual human server, not a robot or some other form of 'automation', and I sure as heck don't want a robot or some automation preparing my food, either."

      Exactly! We want our undocumented aliens who never read anything about hygiene prepare our food, fresh from the bathroom and not some sterile machine.

    • by voss ( 52565 )

      At "real sit down restaurants" they usually work for tips which are quite a bit better than $15 an hour.

      The type of restaurants that would be effected are fast food places, the type of places that automation would help.

      Also though I don't know about you but a mobile robotic drink refill-er would be pretty useful when you have to wait 20 minutes for a server to bring you a refill on your lemonade or coffee.

    • I don't know about anyone else, but if I go to a real sit-down restaurant, I want an actual human server, not a robot or some other form of 'automation', and I sure as heck don't want a robot or some automation preparing my food, either. If that was my only other choice then I'd just as soon stay home and cook my own food.

      I used to be a fan of Red Robbin. One day a manager told me how excited he was he was moving to a new location where he could cut staff by 50%. The burgers were dry I noticed.

      It turns out they bought a toaster oven and just throw the patties in where they are under a heat lamp. No fry cook needed. Can I custom order a burger with medium or medium rare? Nope. Only 1 guy in the kitchen. Everything is now frozen or pre-made and the patties get thrown into a toaster every 5 minutes and are grabbed. Instant savi

    • One of the chain "sit down" restaurants around here has started putting tablet-like things on the tables. A waiter/waitress still comes around (and balloon artists circulate and make animals for the kids on weekends), but this tablet allows you to do things like enter orders for dessert, additional food, check your bill, and swipe and pay without waiting for the waitress to "come and serve you." All in all, I think it's an improvement - now, service times are maddeningly slow in most restaurants like this

    • Yes, if a robot serves your food, you have way too few incorrect orders, jackass attitudes, substandard sanitization. And not to mention you lose all chance that your server will spit in your food.

    • by idji ( 984038 )
      I'd be quite happy. When i go to a restaurant in California the waiter is usually fawning over me to get tips or simply begging for money, or spitting in my food when he knows no tip is coming. I go out to eat, not to get involved with his personal sob story.
  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:05PM (#51814853) Journal
    • The National Review is not exactly an unbiased or labor-friendly publication.

  • Talks cheap, till you have pay for it. If the machines existed today, they'd be purchased; regardless of the minimum wage. Those machines that do exist are being purchased, today. And it's OK for Papa Johns to get his panties in a twist.
    • by religionofpeas ( 4511805 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:11PM (#51814905)

      If the machines existed today, they'd be purchased; regardless of the minimum wage.

      Not if the machines cost more than minimum wage.

      • If the machines existed today, they'd be purchased; regardless of the minimum wage.

        Not if the machines cost more than minimum wage.

        Exactly. There's a breaking point. And California just passed it, apparently.

    • by deKernel ( 65640 )

      Those machines do exist, and they are being phased into production for the sole purpose of keeping labor costs in-line with product prices. The issue is that with the forced increase in minimum wage, the adoption rate will be higher.

      Regarding Papa John getting his panties in a twist, his company is actually good to work for. I spent a few years in college delivering pizza for them, and they were good to the people. I can't speak personally for him, but I believe he does see the value of having employees, bu

    • by quintessencesluglord ( 652360 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:43PM (#51815263)

      I am always bemused that after call centers being moved to India, manufacturing jobs ending up in China, and even Fords being built in Mexico that people can't fathom that increasing labor costs at home might have an affect on the job market. Like the US labor market is somehow a product of American exceptionalism, free from other cost concerns.

      While trying to increase the ranks of the middle class is laudable, it seems to be more ending jobs for entry-level workers.

      The difference in yearly income between a burrito engineer and a degreed and licensed professional is about $10k under the new scheme. Why bother with the school debit, the professional associations, and yearly certifications when you could just work fast-food?

      Except once that pandora's box of automation is opened, even those professional careers are fair game.

  • Is the submitter paid by the hour, or by the number of times he can fit "restaurant industry" into TFS?

  • Robots make better BURGERS!!!!!!!

  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:19PM (#51814965) Homepage Journal
    I'm quitting my IT job and taking one of these $31,000 year dream jobs!
  • ... clamping down... in a state that is the tech capital of the most advanced civilization in human history?

    Yeah... automation might happen, champ.

  • by somenickname ( 1270442 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:25PM (#51815043)

    If people who normally live paycheck to paycheck now have some disposable income, maybe they will spend some of it at restaurants. Maybe they will even spend enough to more than make up for the increase in employee wages.

  • by wiredog ( 43288 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:27PM (#51815065) Journal

    Burger flipping is ripe for automation anyway. The rest of making an automated McDees is already done. Royal Farms uses touch screens for the customers to order, and the automated checkouts are in all the grocery stores now.

    I worked in industrial automation 20 years ago, and I knew then that the day when people who were intellectually on the left side of the bell curve were unemployable was coming. No here quite yet, but in the next 10 years it will become a major political and social issue.

  • by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1@@@hotmail...com> on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:29PM (#51815083)
    It almost seems like government is helpless or has thrown up its hands in dealing with the root causes of the problem, which is the responsibility of government.

    The problem is not that people aren't getting paid enough. That is what is called a symptom (for the layman). The problem is that too many people want to live and work in California, for fucks sake! This is the root of housing issues, unaffordability, income disparity, etc. in California. When will people realize that?

    Increasing minimum wage just adds to the fundamental pressures here. People are being paid below this new minimum wage because.... There are people willing to work for less than the minimum wage! Do you really think increasing the wage will make the housing crunch better? Make it overall more affordable and possible to live here?

    We need policies that make it less expensive to live here, not more. But of course those are the policies that are hard to come up with, and inconvenient -- so yeah, let's just ignore those.
  • by Robotbeat ( 461248 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:31PM (#51815109) Journal

    I have been saying for years that an increase in the minimum wage can partly pay for itself by spurring automation. And that's a very good thing, for everyone.

    Some business owners might prefer to pay a bunch of people $1/hour to dig a ditch using a shovel, but at $15/hour, you gotta use a backhoe.

    I always find it funny when rightwingers complain that a minimum wage increase is simultaneously entirely inflationary AND that it will cause you to lose your job to automation.

    I've often thought that we are using far too LITTLE automation, not too much. If burger flipping can be automated, why the heck aren't we automating it? Oh, right, because it's cheaper up-front (but not long-term) to just pay someone a poverty wage.

    And it's also always funny to see rightwingers pull out the Luddite critique, i.e. that automation will put us out of jobs, when in fact we've had increasing automation for centuries, now, but not any lower voluntary unemployment. So the Luddite critique is ridiculous when OTHER people use it, but totally fine otherwise...

    And then, realize that we had a real minimum wage of about $11/hour in the 1960s, when productivity was FAR lower, when we had far less economic productivity per person. If you adjusted the minimum wage for productivity growth, it'd be over $20/hour right now.

    I actually think that by NOT raising the minimum wage, we've stymied technological progress. Yes, there's definitely a limit to how fast you can increase the minimum wage without hitting inflation (or possibly some unemployment), but we're not near that limit with $15/hour.

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Thursday March 31, 2016 @12:37PM (#51815185)

    The minimum wage causes no competitive disadvantage to local businesses.

    If a single restaurant had to pay minimum wage and not its competitors, it could be hurt by the additional cost. If all restaurants have the same cost, then all are as competitive as they were be before. There is the slight problem that a dinner that used to cost $10 will now cost $11 - I doubt that will deter many customers. On the plus side, customers may feel less obliged to pay a large tip to the waiter.

    Other industries will have the same competitive equality as long as their competitors are in California. If they compete with Mexican or Chinese businesses, they may have problems. That issue brings us to the TPP which may expedite solutions for those businesses (at the cost of California jobs).

  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @01:28PM (#51815841)
    If automation is going to happen, then it will happen. No sense letting them dangle this sword over our heads.
  • by Cimexus ( 1355033 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @01:50PM (#51816157)

    Why on earth isn't minimum wage tied to CPI (inflation) like it is in most other countries? Set it to some agreed amount, then index it each year based on official inflation figures. The way it is now, the minimum wage even AFTER being increased to $15 still won't be as high as it was in the 1960s, in terms of actual buying power.

    This whole "setting it to a fixed, static amount" is a weird, high-maintenance way to legislate. It just means you have to go through the same process another decade down the track.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Thursday March 31, 2016 @03:09PM (#51817207) Homepage

    people had four specific jobs.

    1) Protect the tribe.

    2) Physically gather plants.

    3) Hunt animals.

    4) Make essential clothing the few minor tools for use in jobs 1-4.

    EVERYONE did those things. Today, each of those jobs is done by less than 1% of our population. Each of those jobs, is for all effective purposes, made obsolete by automation and efficiency gains.

    Are we all unemployed? No. Work is dependent not on things that need to be done, but instead on things we want to be done..

    As long as mankind has dreams and desires, there will be work. And Humans are greedy S.O.B.s Give each of us a sex-bot and we will demand a second so we can have a three-way.

    Mankind won't run out of dreams and desires until we flood the universe - which I don't see as being a problem for the forseeable future. We haven't even left Earth yet.

It appears that PL/I (and its dialects) is, or will be, the most widely used higher level language for systems programming. -- J. Sammet

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