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Do we need a robot tax?

Indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tions through­out his­to­ry play out like this: repet­i­tive and mun­dane jobs are auto­mat­ed by new tech­nol­o­gy, liveli­hoods evap­o­rate, skills become obso­lete, and in the process humans are com­pelled to retrain and find new work. Whether it’s tex­tile work­ers or check­out assis­tants, lamp­lighters or petrol-pump atten­dants, automa­tion shows lit­tle mer­cy.

In the ear­ly-19th cen­tu­ry, dur­ing the first indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion, tra­di­tion­al jobs dried up, the labour share of income fell, while cor­po­rate prof­its surged, and the gap between the wages of the rich and poor sky­rock­et­ed. Today, we could be doing the time warp again as the third and fourth indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tions take hold.

“So far our age of automa­tion large­ly mir­rors the ear­ly days of indus­tri­al­i­sa­tion in eco­nom­ic terms. It took over half a cen­tu­ry until aver­age per­son saw the ben­e­fits of the Indus­tri­al Rev­o­lu­tion trick­le down,” explains Carl Benedikt Frey, Oxford Mar­tin Citi Fel­low at Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty, in his new book The Tech­nol­o­gy Trap.

This 50-year gap is called the Engels’ pause, named after Karl Marx’s friend Friedrich Engels, who described the dark satan­ic mills of indus­tri­al­is­ing Eng­land in the ear­ly-1800s. It was an era of great social and eco­nom­ic upheaval. Wage stag­na­tion and new tech­nolo­gies made only a few wealthy, while many angry Lud­dites raged against the machines, smash­ing machin­ery as it dis­placed labour­ers.

Tax incentives for labour-frugal tech firms

Some econ­o­mists say we’re now in a new Engels’ pause. There are no neo-Lud­dites smash­ing robots, but France’s new dig­i­tal tax on big com­pa­nies, such as Face­book, Google and Ama­zon, and the UK’s pro­posed levy are per­haps the first signs that gov­ern­ments aren’t hap­py with how this new indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion is turn­ing out in terms of who ben­e­fits, main­ly a hand­ful of US tech giants.

“We’re in an era when those with cap­i­tal have accrued tremen­dous ben­e­fits over those who engage in rou­tine labour. That has fuelled income inequal­i­ty and a pop­ulist back­lash. We need to invest in the human future and make pol­i­cy changes that pre­serve oppor­tu­ni­ty for peo­ple of ordi­nary means,” says Dar­rell West, found­ing direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Tech­nol­o­gy Inno­va­tion at Brook­ings Insti­tu­tion.

Already, super-star tech firms from Apple to Alpha­bet are labour fru­gal. At the same time the share of income now being pumped into cap­i­tal ver­sus labour is on the rise. For cor­po­ra­tions, this makes sense when labour is taxed rather than robots, arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence or dig­i­talised ser­vices. Yet gov­ern­ments around the globe are main­ly fund­ed by tax­es of real human work­ers through pay­roll and income.

If gov­ern­ments gloss over the social costs of automa­tion, their cred­i­bil­i­ty will dimin­ish

“When the call cen­tre team is replaced by an auto­mat­ed sys­tem, the gov­ern­ment los­es out on the team’s income tax­es and Nation­al Insur­ance con­tri­bu­tions by both the employ­ees and employ­ers,” says Ryan Abbott, pro­fes­sor of law at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Sur­rey.

“The gov­ern­ment also los­es mon­ey because the auto­mat­ed sys­tem is not gen­er­at­ing a lot of the tax rev­enue peo­ple oth­er­wise gen­er­ate includ­ing VAT and prop­er­ty tax­es. We are unin­ten­tion­al­ly sub­si­dis­ing automa­tion. If a busi­ness can replace a per­son with a machine, they receive tax ben­e­fits from doing so that makes automa­tion appeal­ing even when it’s not oth­er­wise more effi­cient.”

What would a robot tax do?

On this basis, Bill Gates pro­posed a robot tax sev­er­al years ago as a way of address­ing our 21st-cen­tu­ry Engels’ pause. This way, gov­ern­ments could fund oth­er types of employ­ment we des­per­ate­ly need from edu­ca­tors to social work­ers and slow down the upheaval caused by automa­tion. The fact is glob­al soci­ety isn’t catch­ing up quick­ly enough in shift­ing to high-paid, high-tech jobs. We aren’t rais­ing pro­duc­tiv­i­ty in the UK or many oth­er G20 coun­tries either.

In Dr Frey’s The Tech­nol­o­gy Trap, he says there has always been a price to pay for each indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion. Are we pay­ing it now? Could a mod­ern-day neo-Lud­dite rev­o­lu­tion be artic­u­lat­ing itself through pop­ulist move­ments in North Amer­i­ca and Europe? It is hard to tell.

“As automa­tion comes into finance, retail, trans­porta­tion and health­care, we need a new social con­tract that pro­vides retrain­ing for those at risk of redun­dan­cy, new edu­ca­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties for those seek­ing to upgrade their job skills and a stronger social safe­ty net for those falling between the cracks,” says Brook­ings’ Dr West. Yet this takes a lot of mon­ey.

What could the true cost of automation be?

As cer­tain jobs dis­ap­pear, labour-fru­gal com­pa­nies come to the fore, the high street moves into auto­mat­ed ware­hous­es and tech­nol­o­gy cre­ates few­er well-paid jobs with untold wealth for a small­er slice of the pop­u­la­tion, is a shift in tax­a­tion the right answer? Could it put the brakes on the fourth indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion?

“Say­ing a robot tax would be a tax on inno­va­tion is like say­ing any cor­po­rate tax­es are inno­va­tion tax­es. For many rea­sons, com­pa­nies and indi­vid­u­als invest despite the exis­tence of tax­es,” argues Pro­fes­sor Abbott.

“The more eth­i­cal dilem­ma is how egal­i­tar­i­an a soci­ety we want to have. Income dis­par­i­ty is already a seri­ous prob­lem and automa­tion is like­ly to make it worse unless we have a more pro­gres­sive tax sys­tem. This is because automa­tion is like­ly to reduce gov­ern­ment tax rev­enue at the same time that it will require greater invest­ments in work­er retrain­ing and social ben­e­fits.”

It doesn’t help that around the world the tax bur­den on labour is increas­ing, while there’s a trend towards decreas­ing cor­po­rate tax­es to stim­u­late domes­tic invest­ment. This could exac­er­bate the prob­lem. The case for a robot tax or one on the fruits of automa­tion may nev­er be greater. This is an issue now for pol­i­cy­mak­ers rather than tech­nol­o­gists.

“If gov­ern­ments gloss over the social costs of automa­tion, their cred­i­bil­i­ty will dimin­ish. For a long time, gov­ern­ments chose to over­look the costs of glob­al­i­sa­tion and focus on the ben­e­fits,” Dr Frey con­cludes in his book. “Gov­ern­ments must avoid mak­ing the same mis­take with automa­tion. And the stakes could not be high­er.”