https://medium.com/basic-income/self-driving-trucks-are-going-to-hit-us-like-a-human-driven-truck-b8507d9c5961

Self-Driving Trucks Are Going to Hit Us Like a Human-Driven Truck

Late last year, I took a road trip with my partner from our home in New 
Orleans, Louisiana to Orlando, Florida and as we drove by town after town, we 
got to talking about the potential effects self-driving vehicle technology 
would have not only on truckers themselves, but on all the local economies 
dependent on trucker salaries. Once one starts wondering about this kind of 
one-two punch to America’s gut, one sees the prospects aren’t pretty.

We are facing the decimation of entire small town economies, a disruption the 
likes of which we haven’t seen since the construction of the interstate highway 
system itself bypassed entire towns. If you think this may be a bit of 
hyperbole… let me back up a bit and start with this:


Source: NPR
This is a map of the most common job in each US state in 2014.

It should be clear at a glance just how dependent the American economy is on 
truck drivers. According to the American Trucker Association, there are 3.5 
million professional truck drivers in the US, and an additional 5.2 million 
people employed within the truck-driving industry who don’t drive the trucks. 
That’s 8.7 million trucking-related jobs.

We can’t stop there though, because the incomes received by these 8.2 million 
people create the jobs of others. Those 3.5 million truck drivers driving all 
over the country stop regularly to eat, drink, rest, and sleep. Entire 
businesses have been built around serving their wants and needs. Think 
restaurants and motels as just two examples. So now we’re talking about 
millions more whose employment depends on the employment of truck drivers. But 
we still can’t even stop there.

Those working in these restaurants and motels along truck-driving routes are 
also consumers within their own local economies. Think about what a server 
spends her paycheck and tips on in her own community, and what a motel maid 
spends from her earnings into the same community. That spending creates other 
paychecks in turn. So now we’re not only talking about millions more who depend 
on those who depend on truck drivers, but we’re also talking about entire small 
town communities full of people who depend on all of the above in more rural 
areas. With any amount of reduced consumer spending, these local economies will 
shrink.

One further important detail to consider is that truck drivers are well-paid. 
They provide a middle class income of about $40,000 per year. That’s a higher 
income than just about half (46%) of all tax filers, including those of married 
households. They are also greatly comprised by those without college 
educations. Truck driving is just about the last job in the country to provide 
a solid middle class salary without requiring a post-secondary degree. Truckers 
are essentially the last remnant of an increasingly impoverished population 
once gainfully employed in manufacturing before those middle income jobs were 
mostly all shipped overseas.

If we now step back and look at the big national picture, we are potentially 
looking at well over 10 million American workers and their families whose 
incomes depend entirely or at least partially on the incomes of truck drivers, 
all of whom markedly comprise what is left of the American middle class.

So as long as the outlook for US trucking is rosy, we’re fine, right?

The Short-Term Job Outlook of the American Trucker

The trucking industry expects to see 21% more truck driving jobs by 2020. They 
also expect to see an increasing shortfall in drivers, with over 100,000 jobs 
open and unable to find drivers to fill them. Higher demand than supply of 
truckers also points to higher pay, so for at least the next five years, the 
future is looking great for truck drivers. The only thing that could put a 
damper on this would be if the demand for truck drivers were to say… drive off 
a sharp cliff.

That cliff is the self-driving truck.
The technology already exists to enable trucks to drive themselves. Google 
shocked the world when it announced its self-driving car it had already driven 
over 100,000 miles without accident. These cars have since driven over 1.7 
million miles and have only been involved in 11 accidents, all caused by humans 
and not the computers. And this is mostly within metropolitan areas.

“And as you might expect, we see more accidents per mile driven on city streets 
than on freeways; we were hit 8 times in many fewer miles of city driving.” — 
Chris Urmson, director of Google’s self-driving car program
So according to Google’s experience, the greater danger lies within cities and 
not freeways, and driving between cities involves even fewer technological 
barriers than within them. Therefore, it’s probably pretty safe to say 
driverless freeway travel is even closer to our future horizon of driverless 
transportation. How much closer? It has already happened.

On May 6, 2015, the first self-driving truck hit the American road in the state 
of Nevada.
Self-driving trucks are no longer the future. They are the present. They’re 
here.

“AU 010.” License plates are rarely an object of attention, but this one’s 
special — the funky number is the giveaway. That’s why Daimler bigwig Wolfgang 
Bernhard and Nevada governor Brian Sandoval are sharing a stage, mugging for 
the phalanx of cameras, together holding the metal rectangle that will, in just 
a minute, be slapped onto the world’s first officially recognized self-driving 
truck.
According to Daimler, these trucks will be in a decade-long testing phase, 
racking up over a million miles before being deemed fit for adoption, but the 
technology isn’t even anything all that new. There’s no laser-radar or LIDAR 
like in Google’s self-driving car. It’s just ordinary radar and cameras. The 
hardware itself is already yesterday’s news. They’re just the first ones to 
throw them into a truck and allow truckers to sit back and enjoy the ride, 
while the truck itself does all the driving.

If the truck needs help, it’ll alert the driver. If the driver doesn’t respond, 
it’ll slowly pull over and wait for further instructions. This is nothing 
fancy. This is not a truck version of KITT from Knight Rider. This is just an 
example of a company and a state government getting out of the way of 
technology and letting it do what it was built to do — enable us to do more 
with less. In the case of self-driving trucks, one big improvement in 
particular is fewer accidents.

In 2012 in the US, 330,000 large trucks were involved in crashes that killed 
nearly 4,000 people, most of them in passenger cars. About 90 percent of those 
were caused by driver error.
That’s like one and a half 9/11s yearly. Human-driven trucks kill people.

Robot trucks will kill far fewer people, if any, because machines don’t get 
tired. Machines don’t get distracted. Machines don’t look at phones instead of 
the road. Machines don’t drink alcohol or do any kind of drugs or involve any 
number of things that somehow contribute to the total number of accidents every 
year involving trucks. For this same reasoning, pilots too are bound to be 
removed from airplanes.

Humans are dangerous behind the wheel of anything.

Robot trucks also don’t need salaries — salaries that stand to go up because 
fewer and fewer people want to be truckers. A company can buy a fleet of 
self-driving trucks and never pay another human salary for driving. The only 
costs will be upkeep of the machinery. No more need for health insurance 
either. Self-driving trucks will also never need to stop to rest, for any 
reason. Routes will take less time to complete.

All of this means the replacement of truckers is inevitable. It is not a matter 
of “if”, it’s only a matter of “when.” So the question then becomes, how long 
until millions of truckers are freshly unemployed and what happens to them and 
all the rest of us as a result?

The Long-Term Job Outlook of the American Trucker

First, let’s look at the potential time horizons for self-driving cars. Tesla 
intends to release a software update next month that will turn on “autopilot” 
mode, immediately allowing all Tesla Model S drivers to be driven between “San 
Francisco and Seattle without the driver doing anything”, in Elon Musk’s own 
words. The cars actually already have the technology to even drive from 
“parking lot to parking lot”, but that ability will remain unactivated by 
software.

Tesla-driven humans won’t be able to legally let their cars do all the driving, 
but who are we kidding? There will be Teslas driving themselves, saving lives 
in the process, and governments will need to catch up to make that driving 
legal. This process is already here in 2015. So when will the process end? When 
will self-driving cars conquer our roads?


Source: Morgan Stanley
According to Morgan Stanley, complete autonomous capability will be here by 
2022, followed by massive market penetration by 2026 and the cars we know and 
love today then entirely extinct in another 20 years thereafter.

Granted, this is only one estimate of many and it’s all educated guesswork. So 
here are some other estimates:

Navigant Research: “By 2035, sales of autonomous vehicles will reach 95.4 
million annually, representing 75% of all light-duty vehicle sales.”
IHS Automotive: “There should be nearly 54 million self-driving cars in use 
globally by 2035.”
ABI Research: “Half of new vehicles shipping in North America to have 
driverless, robotic capabilities by 2032.”
Nissan: “In 2020 we’re talking more autonomous drive capability. It’s going to 
be an evolutionary process and 2020 will be the first year to truly see some of 
these capabilities start to be introduced in the vehicle.”
Take all of these estimates together, and we’re looking at a window of massive 
disruption starting somewhere between 2020 and 2030.
There is no turning the wheel in prevention of driving off this cliff either. 
Capitalism itself has the wheel now, and what the market wants, the market 
gets. Competition will make sure of it. Tesla and Google are not the only 
companies looking to develop autonomous vehicles. There are others.

A company named Veeo Systems is developing vehicles as small as 2-seaters to as 
large as 70-seat buses, and will be testing them in 30 US cities by the end of 
2016.

At 25 to 40 percent cheaper, the cost to ride the driverless public transit 
vehicles will be significantly less expensive than traditional buses and 
trains… The vehicles are electric, rechargeable and could cost as low as $1 to 
$3 to run per day.
Apple is also developing its own self-driving car.

The project is code-named Titan and the vehicle design resembles a minivan, the 
Wall Street Journal reported… Apple already has technology that may lend itself 
to an electric car and expertise managing a vast supply chain. The company has 
long researched battery technology for use in its iPhones, iPads and Macs. The 
mapping system it debuted in 2012 can be used for navigation…
And Uber is developing its own self-driving car.

Uber said it will develop “key long-term technologies that advance Uber’s 
mission of bringing safe, reliable transportation to everyone, everywhere,” 
including driverless cars, vehicle safety and mapping services.
It’s this last one that fully intends to transform the transportation 
landscape. Uber is going all-in on self-driving vehicles to the point it wants 
to entirely eliminate car ownership as a 20th century relic.

Travis Kalanick, the CEO and founder of Uber, said at a conference last year 
that he’d replace human Uber drivers with a fleet of self-driving cars in a 
second. “You’re not just paying for the car — you’re paying for the other dude 
in the car,” he said. “When there’s no other dude in the car, the cost of 
taking an Uber anywhere becomes cheaper than owning a vehicle.” That, he said, 
will “bring the cost below the cost of ownership for everybody, and then car 
ownership goes away.”
That’s the potential of self-driving cars — the outright extinction of car 
ownership. And with that, the elimination of entire industries built up around 
the existence of car ownership like: mechanics, car washes, parking, valets, 
body shops, rental companies, car insurance, car loans, and on and on. Even 
hugely expensive and capital intensive mass-transit infrastructure projects 
like streetcars and light rail can be dropped in favor of vastly cheaper on 
demand robotic “transportation clouds”, and all those construction and 
maintenance jobs right along with it.

Big players are already in the game. There are huge savings to be found, huge 
profits to be created. Higher quality and safety is assured. Driverless 
vehicles are coming, and they are coming fast.

But again, what about trucks specifically?

Any realistic time horizon for self-driving trucks needs to look at horizons 
for cars and shift those even further towards the present. Trucks only need to 
be self-driven on highways. They do not need warehouse-to-store autonomy to be 
disruptive. City-to-city is sufficient. At the same time, trucks are almost 
entirely corporate driven. There are market forces above and beyond private 
cars operating for trucks. If there are savings to be found in eliminating 
truckers from drivers seats, which there are, these savings will be sought. 
It’s actually really easy to find these savings right now.

Wirelessly linked truck platoons are as simple as having a human driver drive a 
truck, with multiple trucks without drivers following closely behind. This not 
only saves on gas money (7% for only two trucks together), but can immediately 
eliminate half of all truckers if for example 2-truck convoys became the norm. 
There’s no real technical obstacles to this option. It’s a very simple use of 
present technology.

Basically, the only real barrier to the immediate adoption of self-driven 
trucks is purely legal in nature, not technical or economic. With self-driving 
vehicles currently only road legal in a few states, many more states need to 
follow suit unless autonomous vehicles are made legal at the national level. 
And Sergey Brin of Google has estimated this could happen as soon as 2017. 
Therefore…

The answer to the big question of “When?” for self-driving trucks is that they 
can essentially hit our economy at any time.
The Eve of Massive Social and Economic Disruption

Main Street USA has already taken a big hit, and increasingly so, over the past 
few decades. Manufacturing has been shipped overseas to areas where labor is 
far cheaper because costs of living are far cheaper. Companies like Walmart 
have spread everywhere, concentrating a reduced labor force into one-stop 
shopping facilities requiring fewer total workers than what was needed with 
smaller, more numerous, and more widely spread Mom & Pop type stores. Companies 
like Amazon have even further concentrated this even further reduced labor 
force into automated warehouse centers capable of obviating stores entirely and 
shipping directly to consumers.

All of the above means fewer ways of securing employment in fewer places, while 
commerce has become more geographically concentrated and access to money has 
become increasingly shifted away from the bottom and middle of the income 
spectrum towards the top.


Source: Mother Jones
This is what happens when good-paying jobs are eliminated, and that money not 
spent on wages and salaries instead stays in the hands of owners of capital, or 
is given in smaller amounts to lower-paid employees in lower-wage jobs. 
Inequality grows more and more extreme and our land of opportunity vanishes. 
Economic growth slows to a crawl.

This is where we’re at and this is what we face as we look towards a quickly 
approaching horizon of over 3 million unemployed truckers and millions more 
unemployed service industry workers in small towns all over the country 
dependent on truckers as consumers of their services.


Glenrio, TX — Source: Reader’s Digest
The removal of truckers from freeways will have an effect on today’s towns 
similar to the effects the freeways themselves had on towns decades ago that 
had sprung up around bypassed stretches of early highways. When the 
construction of the interstate highway system replaced Route 66, things changed 
as drivers drove right on past these once thriving towns. The result was ghost 
towns like Glenrio, Texas.

With the patience that carved the Grand Canyon over eons, nature reclaims 
Glenrio, where the clock stopped with the bypass of Route 66. The replacement 
of Route 66 with a four-lane superhighway that allowed motorists to zip past 
rather than wander through ultimately allowed Glenrio to decline.
With self-driving cars and trucks, here again we face the prospect of town 
after town being zipped past by people (if even present) choosing to instead 
just sleep in their computer-driven vehicles. Except this time, there is no new 
highway being made for businesses to relocate closer to and new towns to emerge 
along. This time, as is true of the effect of technology on jobs, it’s 
different. This time, there’s no need for entire towns to even exist at all.

The Road Left to Take

As close as 2025 — that is in a mere 10 years — our advancing state of 
technology will begin disrupting our economy in ways we can’t even yet imagine. 
Human labor is increasingly unnecessary and even economically unviable compared 
to machine labor. And yet we still insist on money to pay for what our machines 
are making for us. As long as this remains true, we must begin providing 
ourselves the money required to purchase what the machines are producing.

Without a technological dividend, the engine that is our economy will seize, or 
we will fight against technological progress itself in the same way some once 
destroyed their machine replacements. Without non-work income, we will actually 
fight to keep from being replaced by the technology we built to replace us.

Just as our roads a decade from now will be full of machine drivers instead of 
human drivers, a 21st century economy shall be driven by human consumers, not 
human workers, and these consumers must be freely given their purchasing power. 
If we refuse, if we don’t provide ourselves a universal and unconditional basic 
income soon, the future is going to hit us like a truck — a truck driven solely 
by ourselves.

To allow this to happen would be truly foolish, for what is the entire purpose 
of technology but to free us to pursue all we wish to pursue? Fearing the loss 
of jobs shouldn’t be a fear at all. It should be welcomed. It should be freeing.

No one should be asking what we’re going to do if computers take our jobs.

We should all be asking what we get to do once freed from them.


Scott Santens writes about basic income on his blog. You can also follow him 
here on Medium, on Twitter, on Facebook, or on Reddit where he is a moderator 
for the /r/BasicIncome community of over 26,000 subscribers.




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