Reflections are only that, reflections, nothing more nothing less. Often these reflections are related to books I read, but occasionally also other things. These are often written very late, very fast,  using notes from my mobile phone, so the grammar and spelling is horrible.



The Lights in the Tunnel by Martin Ford

I read Martin’s book a few months ago and did not really know what to say about it. In one way it is the kind of airplane literature that I keep complaining about as it has one idea and is just discussing that from different angles though the book… But this idea is really fundamental and he write’s in such a relaxed, but passionate, way that it is like having a really inspiring conversation on a long-haul flight (or from a climate/innovation perspective preferable a high-speed train trip).

I should start by saying that there are a number of things I disagree with, and I find it a little sad that he address current economist in the way he does as I think it does not add to the book and will not convince any of the old school economists. But maybe it was worth a try… But it is not important (as old school economists are not very important more than the fact that they delay action in important areas).

The theme of the book is automation. Not simple automation, but transformative and it asks the question what happens when better intelligence and better machines are merged. What jobs are needed and what jobs are not?

In a time where policy makers, media, business and NGOs all agree that anything should be done to create almost any jobs Martin takes a step back and ask, where are we heading with the current development?

The conclusion is simple, and not surprising when you look around at the real world development: It is very likely that there will be a lot less available jobs than we usually assume.  Especially when intelligence (different forms as AI) is improving at an accelerated phase challenge many of the white color jobs that no one is discussing as disappearing (doctors, lawyers, investors, etc). People that today spend a lot of time with things that are not very creative (an area that will be hard to substitute).

Obviously not all of the work will disappear but if 50% can be taken over that is 50% lost jobs (and in most cases also demand for other skills). In the same way as one person can use a machine to make as many knifes that 100ds of people could do before the industrial revolution it is time to think about the “knowledge sector”…

If we moved from less labor intensive work to more thought intensive work, what is the next step… I would hope creative and ethic lives… So two shifts are needed, first that we don’t focus on simple “thinking” as machines will do the simple things for us, and second that we need to look beyond “jobs” and ask what kind of lives we want people to be able to have in society

I’m particularly interested to see how the increased need to create jobs “at home” in EU and the US will accelerate the transformative trend with jobs lost in existing sectors. Both EU and the US now agree that they should have a manufacturing base as an important part of the economy, but neither seems to understand that the option they have to be competitive is to accelerate the trends Martin describes.

There are more interesting discussion in this book I hope anyone talking about “job creation” and “green tax reforms” will read this, as well as anyone with a general interest in the future.

I proudly bough the e-book on Amazon as I think this kind of approach should be supported and that the big distribution channels must allow the multiple distribution approach by Martin. Why, because he is making the book available for free, or at the cost you are willing to pay, on his page.

So to sum up. It is a book looking in a direction where few dare to look and doing so without being sensationalistic. So if you are interesting in how the society could evolve before the laggards start realizing that their models are out dated I think you should pick up, pay for if you can afford it, and most important read “The lights in the end of the tunnel”.