The agricultural labor conundrum
Instead of worrying so much about robots taking away jobs, maybe we should worry more about wages being too low for robots to even get a chance. Seasonal labor for harvesting agricultural products, particularly fruits and vegetables, is dependent on human labor from a diminishing universe of willing workers. Robots that can supplement or replace human workers in the harvesting process are being developed and tested in startups and academia, but almost all are not yet ready for prime time. In a NY Times article written by Neil Irwin entitled Rethinking Low Productivity, productivity growth has been on a downward path since the Financial Crisis. Irwin, who writes about economic trends, asks whether the downward trend is the cause of low growth, or the result, a troubling question in the dynamics of the agriculture industry.
Aug-9-2017, 05:05:03 GMT
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.06)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.37)
- Industry:
- Banking & Finance > Economy (0.73)
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (0.76)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)