Predictions of the future are often wildly inaccurate.
For example, Back To The Future promised us hoverboards,
while almost everyone who saw Blade Runner couldn't wait to get their hands on
a flying car. Unfortunately, neither are readily available to the general
public yet, which is a crying shame.
Casting an eye into the future and speculating how the world
may look at that time, is never an easy task - there are simply too many
variables involved. New technologies which no one saw coming may be pulled from
the aether, while existing fields which have substantial growth potential, may
fail to develop as expected. A good example of this is 3D films; time and again
they've been touted as the future of the film industry because production
companies have thought consumers would jump at the chance to become more
immersed in the worlds that films create.
While this is true to an extent, the popularity of 3D films
is currently declining quite significantly - as it has done several times
before. Instead, consumers seem far keener to increase the resolution they can
watch their 2D content on, which is seen in the meteoric rise of 4K and UHD
televisions over recent years.
Personally, I always enjoy looking at current trends and
ideas and considering how they may progress over time, so I can form a mental
picture of how the future might look if things continue on their current path.
Applying this approach to the workplace is simple enough to
do because recently there have been a great many new ideas and perspectives on
how the world of work should develop over coming decades, proposed by
politicians, academics, think tanks, and business leaders, among others.
By considering these new ideas, and taking the changes which
have already happened in the workplace over recent years one step further, this
is how the workplace of the 2050s might look...
Remote Working - The New Normal?
Remote working is rapidly on the rise all over the world, and
the stats are striking. For example, a 2019 study by Forbes found that there
has been a 159% rise in remote working in the USA since 2007, while the same
study estimates that before 2020 is over, 50% of the UK workforce will work
remotely, at least part of the time.
Allied to this development, is the decline across much of the
western world of the traditional 'job for life, whereby employees stayed with the same employer throughout their working life, and their concept of career
progression was seeking a promotion within the same company.
The reasons for this decline are complex and multifaceted,
but it is something that has arisen in part due to the desires of both
employers - who responded to economic recessions by calling for greater
flexibility with regard to labor rights - and employees - who responded to a
decades-long period of wage stagnation by becoming more willing to switch
employers (or even careers) in search of greater opportunities and better
working conditions.
As well as the decay of the 'job for life' contributing to
greater flexibility for both employers and employees, it has caused a
substantial increase in the number of people who have become self-employed,
works multiple jobs, has a side business on top of their day job, or take on
freelance work in their spare time.
All these factors are combining to produce a vast number of
highly productive, well-trained, and well-educated workers, who do not need to
be physically present at the office of a primary employer between the hours of
9am and 5pm, Monday to Friday.
However, many people who enjoy working from home do not enjoy
working alone, and this has caused a massive rise in co-working over recent
years.
The growth of co-working spaces looks well-set to continue
into the 2050s and beyond if, as expected, more and more of the workforce begin
working remotely. Indeed, as co-working spaces become busy activity hubs
populated by skilled and enterprising people from a variety of different
backgrounds, it is only natural that these people connect, network, and
synergize with each other - all of which means co-working spaces could become a fertile source of fresh innovations and vibrant new startups all over the
world, not just Silicon Valley.
The 4-Day Workweek
Even for those people who have jobs where remote working is
not an option, changes in their working patterns may be afoot, as the idea of
switching to a 4-day workweek has been suggested by a range of academics, think
tanks, and employers.
For example, the Exeter-based travel company STC Expeditions
recently completed a 12-week trial of the 4-day workweek, while during the 2019
UK General Election, the Labour Party had an official policy to make the 4-day
workweek the UK's standard schedule, before 2030.
The logic behind working 4 days a week instead of 5, is that
several studies have shown peoples' productivity tends to decline after about
32 hours of work per week, meaning that the other 8 hours of the 40-hour workweek
could be given back to the employee with little, if any, loss of productivity.
In fact, a 2019 study by Microsoft Japan found that employee productivity
actually increased by a staggering 40% when they trialed a 4-day workweek for
the duration of the summer.
Whether a 4-day workweek is sustainable in the long-term, not
just over a limited period of time, and to what extent Thursday afternoons
become the new Friday afternoons with regards to productivity, are issues that
will need to be investigated over the coming years, and by the 2050s, we will
likely have our answer.
The Robots Are Coming For Us All
And there's no escape! Like it or not, automation and
technological advances mean that sooner or later, our jobs will be done by
robots who can complete the work quicker, cheaper, and to a better standard than
we ever could.
This is not a change that will take place overnight, but by
the 2050s, across an enormous range of industries and workplaces, highly
skilled custom-made robots will be doing the jobs humans used to do.
This is not a new idea, nor is it a new phenomenon. Consider
the industrial revolution, when vast numbers of textile workers found
themselves surplus to requirements due to the invention of machines that could
do their jobs without requesting break periods, days off, or overtime pay.
In more modern times, think of self-checkout machines in the
supermarket, where a dozen or more self-checkouts can be available for
customers to use, with only one or two store assistants being present to
supervise.
The process of specially made robots replacing people in
their job roles is called automation, and you're going to be hearing a lot more
about it in the future, because right now in a number of very large and very
important industries, robots are being developed which, by the 2050s, will have
taken the jobs of hundreds of millions of people.
For example, in the USA one of the largest sources of
employment for non-college-educated men is vehicle driving; either as a truck
driver, taxi driver, Uber driver, courier, or something else along a similar
line. Even today, self-driving cars are semi-operational, and with the amount
of research funding that is currently being invested into making fully
functional self-driving vehicles not just a reality, but the norm, sooner
rather than later, it seems logical to suggest that by the 2050s the vast
majority of driving jobs will be done by robots, not humans.
No One Is Safe!
By no means is this a phenomenon that is unique to the
automotive industry. Across all industries and all walks of life, the
expectation is that robots will be doing the jobs that people currently do,
within the next few decades.
For example, a 2019 study by Oxford Economics found that 20
million jobs in the manufacturing industry alone could be automated away before
2030 and that many of the people working these jobs would then tend to seek
employment in related industries which are also highly vulnerable to
automation.
In truth, this scenario of widespread global job losses is
not as cataclysmic as it may appear, because ever since capitalism has become
the primary method by which human societies have organized their economies,
innovations and technological advancements have created new employment
opportunities, as well as eliminating existing ones.
A commonly cited example of this is how the invention of
social media platforms has created the job of Social Media Manager, which is a
position that would not have been close to existing even 20 years ago. And
returning to the example of the industrial revolution - this is a development
that created an enormous number of new employment opportunities in factories
and mills while eradicating many of the existing jobs in farming and
agriculture.
However, the sheer scale of the automation which will almost
certainly come over the next few decades may present a challenge like
we have not seen before. For example, a 2015 study by the Bank of England
estimated that nearly 50% of the UK's workforce risk having their job automated
away, with those most vulnerable working in admin, manufacturing, clerical,
care, and customer service jobs.
Crisis Management and Free Money
For All
With so many people at risk of having not just their jobs,
but their careers, automated away, the next question that arises is, 'how do we
respond to this?'
One potential solution which has gained support from people
on all sides of the political spectrum is the idea of a universal basic income
(UBI). UBI can be defined as, a model for providing all citizens of a country
or other geographic area with a given sum of money, regardless of their income,
resources, or employment status,' while the essential principle behind UBI is
the idea that 'all citizens are entitled to a livable income, whether or not
they contribute to production.'
In short, in a world where huge numbers of people will have
their livelihoods and skillsets automated away, leaving them unable to compete
against robots in a free-market economy, how can we ensure that these people
are still able to have a standard of living which affords them some dignity?
Many brilliant minds both past and present have supported the
concept of a UBI because (among other reasons) it could present a solution to
this problem. Some of the more well-known supporters of UBI include Thomas
Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Bertrand Russell, Franklin Roosevelt, Margaret
Mead, Martin Luther King, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg.
It is also important to note that support for UBI has come
from groups of people who would normally have diametrically opposed political
views. For example, one of the best-known modern proponents of UBI is Andrew
Yang, an American tech entrepreneur who recently ran to be the Democratic
nominee for the 2020 presidential election, while on the other side of the
political divide, support for UBI has come from the neoliberal economist Milton
Friedman, and the political scientist Charles Murray, whose views on the issue
of race relations could generously be described as 'controversial'.
It is also worth noting that the American state of Alaska,
which is heavily conservative, has had a form of UBI since 1982. Every year,
residents of Alaska receive up to $2000 simply for living there, with barely
any conditions attached. What's more, studies have shown that Alaska's UBI
program has helped to wipe out extreme poverty in the state, without increasing
unemployment.
Releasing The Shackles
The relative merits of UBI, and how it should be implemented,
are issues that require serious studying and many more words of explanation
than I am afforded for this article, but there is one more point that is vital
to understand in the context of UBI and how it may affect business in the
2050s.
Consider for a second how many frustrated entrepreneurs you
know. How many people in your life would love to start a business if only they
weren't so beholden to the everyday pressures of working long hours to pay the
bills and support their families?
If by the 2050s, UBI has been successfully implemented in a
number of countries, how many people across the world would have been able to
use the extra freedoms afforded to them in terms of both time and finances, to
start businesses and pursue their true calling?
With some of the pressure to pay household bills and expenses
relieved, how many bold new services and groundbreaking products would be
developed by skilled and educated individuals, who all of a sudden had more
time to work on their passion projects?
The Future Is Yours
Whatever your views are on any of the ideas I've presented in
this article, it's worth remembering that nothing is inevitable, and that the
world of the 2050s will be shaped by the actions and desires of ordinary
people, all across the world.
As Abraham Lincoln said, 'the best way to predict the future is to create it.'

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