2013-09-10/Technology and the Distribution of Wealth

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The primary way that technology displaces labor centers on productivity, which amongst most economists today is usually framed as "labor productivity," or the amount of goods and services produced in one hour of human labor.

Labor productivity gains happen by:

a) Holding the amount of labor steady and increasing the flow of goods and services;
b) Holding the flow of goods and service steady and decreasing the amount of labor; or
c) Some combination of the two

Economists focus on "labor productivity" because, historically speaking, human labor has accounted for the largest portion of the total cost of production. As corporations have concentrated on maximizing profits over the last several decades through downsizing, restructuring and the like, it's usually been with a heavy reliance on option "b" – i.e. replacing humans, first with hardware, and now increasingly, with software.