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Articles

Perpetual growth, the labor share, and robots

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ABSTRACT

The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intelligence suggests that there may be an upcoming wave of substitution of human labor by machines. We argue that these new technologies may lead to so-called perpetual growth, i.e. growth of per capita income with a non-progressing state of technology. We specify an exact parameter threshold beyond which perpetual growth emerges, and argue that ongoing technological change may bring the threshold in reach. We also show that in a state of perpetual growth, factor-eliminating technological progress reduces the role of labor in the production process and that this leads to a rising wage rate but ever-declining share of wage income. We present simulation experiments on several policy options to combat this inequality, including a universal basic income as well as an option in which workers become owners of ‘robots’.

Acknowledgements

We thank three anonymous reviewers, Luc Soete, Thomas Ziesemer, Adriaan van Zon, Pierre Mohnen and participants at the UN Expert Group Meeting on ‘Accelerated Technological Change, Artificial Intelligence, Automation and their Implications for Sustainable Development Targets’ (Mexico City, 26–27 April 2018) for comments on an earlier version. The views expressed and any remaining errors remain solely our own.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

 

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