The end of work
2005-09-23
Future history books might look back on the late 20th century
and early 21st century as one of the periods of the greatest
concentration of wealth. The rich are getting richer, and the
poor are getting poorer. Just look at New Orleans. In the CR, the
recent labor-code and bank-fees controversies can be seen
simply as a battle of state regulation vs. the free market, but
there are also long-term societal implications. Jeremy Rifkin, a
U.S. author, spoke in Prague this month of the "end of work." No
major companies are hiring, he said. Instead, they're automating
so that workers aren't needed. Those who own the means of
production - or the ATMs - are getting richer, while more and
more of the population is falling by the wayside. Ultimately, it's
the Right and the rich that have the most to lose. For their own
sake, they had better find a solution to this Marxian conundrum.
[Czech Republic automatic teller machines banks banking
Louisiana poverty United States of America]
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