Andrew Yang on Automation: 'You Can't Turn Truck Drivers into Coders'
by Kiril Nikolaev 12/07/2019

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Andrew Yang on Automation: 'You Can't Turn Truck Drivers into Coders'

Amazon wants to pour $700 million into training its workforce, but Andrew Yang 
suggests it's missing the point.
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in News, U.S. Politics

Amazon wants to pour $700 million into training its workforce, but Andrew Yang 
suggests it's missing the point. | Source: Shutterstock

A report from the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brooklyn Institution 
revealed that automation efforts using robots are very likely to take the jobs 
of 36 million Americans by 2030. That’s 25 percent of the country’s workforce. 
Andrew Yang is probably the American presidential candidate you’ve never heard 
of but he offers a unique solution to this problem. Instead of retraining 
workers who are about to be displaced by automation, he proposes a different 
solution. That's to give every American adult the Freedom Dividend worth $1,000 
per month.
As capitalism increasingly specializes, fewer and fewer people will be valued 
by the market. There is no justice in good people being left behind because a 
robot can do their job more efficiently. We, as a society, need to value people 
even if the market doesn't. pic.twitter.com/KazUBR8W13
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 12, 2019
Andrew Yang Exposes the Gravity of the Automation ProblemIn a series of tweets, 
the presidential aspirant put front and center a problem that nobody seems to 
talk about: automation. He tweeted about his meeting with a roboticist who 
revealed that 96 percent of warehouse fulfillment work has been taken over by 
robots. The remaining four percent are given to humans and they often quit due 
to the mind-numbing nature of the job.
Just met with a robotocist- he described how 96% of a warehouse fulfillment job 
has been automated leaving humans to do the remaining mind-numbing 4%. They 
often quit. “If that’s the future of work we need a different one.”
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 9, 2019
Yang followed up by sharing an article revealing how Amazon is investing $700 
million to retrain a third of its American labor force. The retraining is due 
to automation. The candidate wrote, “Amazon committing $700 million to 
retraining workers is a sign of just how big the automation problem is.”
Amazon committing $700 million to retraining workers is a sign of just how big 
the automation problem is https://t.co/lrUXuZ1bDj
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 11, 2019
While retraining workers might look good on paper, Yang sees things 
differently. In another tweet, the candidate explained how retraining people 
who have been replaced by robots simply does not work. Based on studies, Yang 
said that retraining programs have a poor 0 - 15 percent success rate. He then 
stated that you can’t "turn truck drivers into coders."
Retraining workers who are displaced by automation is great in theory, but the 
data suggest that in practice it doesn’t work — these retraining programs have 
a 0-15% success rate. Most people who think we can turn truck drivers into 
coders are neither. pic.twitter.com/ilwjpqLSy0
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 10, 2019
Yang’s Solution: $1,000 of Freedom Dividend a MonthInstead of trying to 
repurpose workers due to automation, Yang proposes a radical solution to the 
American people: a basic income of $1,000 per month for Americans 18 years old 
and above. According to the presidential candidate, the monthly income would 
bring about a trickle-up economy. It would increase consumption, boost the 
health of local businesses, and generate millions of jobs in the process.
One of the reasons why the #FreedomDividend is for everyone is that it would 
create a trickle-up economy, in which local businesses are stimulated by an 
increase in consumption, which would circulate the money over and over again 
and create millions of jobs in the process. pic.twitter.com/L42fVTK4tm
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 11, 2019
In addition to that, Yang wrote that the universal basic income for all 
American adults would eliminate jobs that are not valued by the market. An 
example of that is caregiving. It will also enable women to escape abusive work 
or relationships.
The #FreedomDividend would recognize the work that isn't valued by the market, 
like caregiving, that is performed disproportionately by women. Putting cash 
into the hands of women also would empower them to leave exploitative jobs or 
relationships. pic.twitter.com/4AvQcrOL0r
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) July 9, 2019
The solution sounds innovative and appealing to the average Joe. However, 
there’s always the question of funding. Where will the money come from?
According to Andrew Yang, “the big winners of the 21st Century economy” would 
fund the Freedom Dividend. He names big tech companies that are virtually not 
paying any taxes such as Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google. He said: “A tiny 
slice of every Amazon sale, every Google search, every Facebook ad, every Uber 
mile, and that’s enough to pay for a dividend of a thousand dollars a month.”
2020 hopeful @AndrewYang on his plan for basic universal income to give 
Americans $1,000 a month: “We need to put the economic resources into people’s 
hands in order to improve their situations.”Companies that are “big winners of 
the 21st century economy” would fund it, he adds. pic.twitter.com/RdS6xr3DaI
— The View (@TheView) July 8, 2019
Andrew Yang proposes something that instantly appeals to the American public. 
However, will it be enough to get him to the White House? This presidential 
candidate also supports the cryptocurrencies unlike President Donald Trump who 
is clearly "not a fan."

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