Mass Automation Phenomenon
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A Mass Automation Phenomenon is an automation phenomenon that simultaneously eliminates human jobs across multiple economic sectors.
- AKA: Fourth Industrial Revolution, Great Automation, Widespread Automation Event, Universal Job Automation, Mass Technological Displacement.
- Context:
- It can typically accelerate AI-Induced Job Displacement Processes through mass automation simultaneity.
- It can typically overwhelm Worker Retraining Programs through mass automation scale.
- It can typically trigger Economic System Transformation through mass automation disruption.
- It can typically necessitate Universal Basic Income Policy through mass automation unemployment.
- It can often create Social Upheaval Risk through mass automation displacement.
- It can often enable Post-Work Economic Systems through mass automation completeness.
- It can often cause Political System Crisis through mass automation speed.
- It can range from being a Sectoral Mass Automation Phenomenon to being an Universal Mass Automation Phenomenon, depending on its mass automation breadth.
- It can range from being a Gradual Mass Automation Phenomenon to being a Sudden Mass Automation Phenomenon, depending on its mass automation timeline.
- It can range from being a Predictable Mass Automation Phenomenon to being an Unexpected Mass Automation Phenomenon, depending on its mass automation foreseeability.
- It can range from being a Manageable Mass Automation Phenomenon to being an Uncontrollable Mass Automation Phenomenon, depending on its mass automation governance capacity.
- ...
- Example(s):
- Industrial Revolution Automation displacing agricultural workers.
- Computer Revolution Automation eliminating clerical jobs.
- AI Revolution Automation replacing knowledge workers.
- Robotics Revolution Automation substituting service workers.
- AGI Emergence Automation eliminating all human labor.
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- Gradual Technology Adoption, which allows adaptation.
- Sector-Specific Automation, which affects limited areas.
- Human-Augmenting Technology, which enhances rather than replaces.
- See: Future State of Large-Scale Technological Unemployment, Technological Unemployment Cause, AI-Induced Job Displacement Process, Human Labor Obsolescence Phenomenon, General-Purpose AI System, Automation-Induced Political Power Erosion Process, Post-Work Economic System.