The next manufacturing revolution is here | Olivier Scalabre

Ғылым және технология

Economic growth has been slowing for the past 50 years, but relief might come from an unexpected place - a new form of manufacturing that is neither what you thought it was nor where you thought it was. Industrial systems thinker Olivier Scalabre details how a fourth manufacturing revolution will produce a macroeconomic shift and boost employment, productivity and growth.
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Пікірлер: 490

  • @pencilbender
    @pencilbender7 жыл бұрын

    that awkward moment when it's not a stand up comedy show. 0:13

  • @Joey_ott

    @Joey_ott

    7 жыл бұрын

    I know so awkward

  • @AmeshaSpentaArmaiti

    @AmeshaSpentaArmaiti

    7 жыл бұрын

    to be fair, there are a few good jokes in there.

  • @AnoNymous-rf5te

    @AnoNymous-rf5te

    7 жыл бұрын

    They thought the guy would pull off a joke

  • @iwayanbagus2271

    @iwayanbagus2271

    6 жыл бұрын

    i was thinking the same thing

  • @DSBrekus
    @DSBrekus7 жыл бұрын

    5:35 when he gets to the point.

  • @utube101x

    @utube101x

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @Redbellynelly

    @Redbellynelly

    7 жыл бұрын

    and its a basic, vague point at that. riveting stuff!

  • @Alex-uj9xz

    @Alex-uj9xz

    7 жыл бұрын

    haha thanks

  • @deeed.

    @deeed.

    2 жыл бұрын

    dammm 5 years...how u guys holding up

  • @erkilaansalu2389
    @erkilaansalu23897 жыл бұрын

    When are we going to realize that we have reached limits of growth? We should replace term "growth" with "development". For example free public transport in cities is a sign of degrowth but it is a development in society. GDP declines, but life gets better.

  • @nikolov901

    @nikolov901

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think productivity has walked its walk or at least the way we measure it. Making stuff cheaper actually decreases productivity.

  • @BlueyMcPhluey

    @BlueyMcPhluey

    7 жыл бұрын

    agreed, we need a new measure of value beyond GDP which really tells us nothing about quality of life

  • @panpiper

    @panpiper

    7 жыл бұрын

    We aren't going to realize it because we haven't. Your limits to growth thesis is as fundamentally flawed as it has always been, as it was flawed in the 1970s when it predicted we'd all be dead by now, as it was flawed back in the days of Malthus 200 years ago when he 'scientifically proved' that unless the inferior classes were all forcibly sterilized, the world would run out of food in just a few decades.

  • @dalaney_davis

    @dalaney_davis

    7 жыл бұрын

    It is real, It's Called the Social Progress index. :) www.ted.com/talks/michael_green_what_the_social_progress_index_can_reveal_about_your_country?language=en

  • @Snagabott

    @Snagabott

    7 жыл бұрын

    I disagree with you there, no need to invent new terms. "Degrowth" as you call it implies that public transport is a hassle for most people - and if so, it is not a positive development. Assuming, however, it actually IS an improvement (and not just a hassle for everyone), it is because the new mode of transportation solves a problem - be it congestion, pollution or something else - and problems can usually be given an economic cost. Basically you put a price on what it would cost (=how much effort it would be) to do something about the problem in the first place. This cost can then be measured against the cost in increased hassle (if any) to the people "forced" to take public transport. It's the same thinking as the classic story about a factory that can produce some stuff dirt cheap, but where doing so will pollute the environment. They sell at a price that reflects the cost of power and raw materials, but not the price of cleaning up their mess - that part of the cost is left to others, possibly without those "others" even realizing they are being sent a big bill. However; the fact that the factory owner managed to sleaze his way out of paying the _true_ cost of production, doesn't make that _true_ cost any less real. If eg. public transportation pollutes less, this is a cost that is now saved and you have achieved an economically measurable improvement. "Cost" in this context can be measured in some specific currency, or you can calculate work hours or some other metric - but unless you find a way to put a number on it, you are necessarily reduced to spouting personal opinion. I think we should aspire to go beyond simple "I-feel-X-because-it's-Monday"- type arguments when we determine what is a desirable outcome for society.

  • @lxc647
    @lxc6477 жыл бұрын

    thanks for summing up the tech ted talks i've watched this year.

  • @meh23p
    @meh23p7 жыл бұрын

    How will the end result be a net increase in employment. I find it hard to imagine that automation can create as many jobs as it eliminates.

  • @kin2838
    @kin28387 жыл бұрын

    growth is the problem we need sustainability and our endless growth is only making things worse we are currently using 150% of the earths yearly resources every year if we don't stop growth and start focusing on reform soon growth will be the death of our civilization and way of life. Endless growth is literally unsustainable in any fashion no matter what you do eventually we run out of space energy and resources to support the people on our planet.

  • @adrift-at-c

    @adrift-at-c

    7 жыл бұрын

    Not necessarily. If you can do more with fewer resources, then you can grow an economy without increasing its demand for resources. Throw in advanced recycling technologies, and your "new" resources can be old resources that have been re-purposed.

  • @JohnBastardSnow

    @JohnBastardSnow

    7 жыл бұрын

    I don't necessarily believe in the following, but I'll play the devils advocate and say that all that grown and using resources on the max is going to lead to Singularity and increased automation, which will find solutions to deal with almost all externalities introduced (like climate change, resource scarcity, etc). It's like investing your last dime in something (unsustainable high investment of resources), because you have that then getting your return on investment (Singularity), and then you don't need to invest anymore in it. The only thing that is not potentially reversible is population and occupied physical space. You can, in theory, with sufficiently futuristic technology reverse climate change, recreate ecosystems, etc.

  • @panpiper

    @panpiper

    7 жыл бұрын

    "...we are currently using 150% of the earths yearly resources every year..." I see, so the whole earth is going to run out of all resources in eight months. What is surprising to me is not how absurd your statement is, it is that 13 people as of this point, thumbed up your nonsense.

  • @check537

    @check537

    7 жыл бұрын

    You could find examples of people making his exact comment every year for decades, and probably centuries

  • @TheLivirus

    @TheLivirus

    7 жыл бұрын

    Increasing productivity is not unsustainable, in fact it may be necessary for sustainability. In essense, an increase in productivity is to use resources more efficicently. Less material, energy and labor is required to produce the same amount of value.

  • @tonyrichards9770
    @tonyrichards97706 жыл бұрын

    Great program as it gives us all something to think about.

  • @baldwinpartners8097
    @baldwinpartners80977 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the quality of your information.

  • @BlueyMcPhluey
    @BlueyMcPhluey7 жыл бұрын

    robots robots robots + Basic Income = fully automated luxury capitalism

  • @edwardiris58

    @edwardiris58

    7 жыл бұрын

    this!

  • @krool1648

    @krool1648

    7 жыл бұрын

    It is much closer because technology is advancing exponentially.

  • @BlueyMcPhluey

    @BlueyMcPhluey

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** I disagree, if the government invested in infrastructure such as the driverless cars and automated farming we could be there in the next couple of years. The technology is there, but the government is so reliant on slave labor at this point that they're not willing to make the change. But also it's not something we should wait for until we can FULLY automate, it's something we should instigate now because the displacement caused by automation already is causing so many problems. We're so far beyond the point of needing full participation in the workforce already

  • @krool1648

    @krool1648

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** My toaster does not use microchips and therefore you analogy is invalid. Besides carbon nanotubes are replacing classic silicon tranzistors:phys.org/news/2016-09-carbon-nanotube-transistors-outperform-silicon.html

  • @krool1648

    @krool1648

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** Hammer was invented thousands of years ago but modern technology is still more advanced that technology of the ancient world.

  • @Cris-rg3dj
    @Cris-rg3dj7 жыл бұрын

    This IS it !! a good VISION. THANKS A LOT. Cris

  • @gavinlew8273
    @gavinlew8273 Жыл бұрын

    Certainly an interesting topic to talk about! Thank you for the presentation.

  • @polyanaalmdx
    @polyanaalmdx3 жыл бұрын

    Alguém mais está aqui pela indicação da Aline Gomes da Conquer! Importantíssimo esse ted!

  • @danielpuga8268

    @danielpuga8268

    3 жыл бұрын

    Eu! Achei muito bom tbm!

  • @JaiKrishna787
    @JaiKrishna7876 жыл бұрын

    Hi Olivier Scalabre 😀😀😀. Thanx for this wonderful video on Industrial Revolution 4.0 😐😐😐

  • @andremendes5116
    @andremendes51167 жыл бұрын

    By far this is the best TED already displayed ... simply fantastic ...

  • @noviceprepper5397
    @noviceprepper53977 жыл бұрын

    interesting talk, thank you

  • @loguerto
    @loguerto7 жыл бұрын

    We need less, better quality reusable products. And most important they must be manufactured and recycled in place.

  • @lisamanchalevi15

    @lisamanchalevi15

    4 жыл бұрын

    as many recycling manufactures as producing, imagine! clean processes, respected matter having journeys, valued and shared compounds, workforce's training serving individual development stages... maybe...

  • @danmccurry3810
    @danmccurry38103 жыл бұрын

    The future is here.....I would recommend this inspiring Ted Talk to anyone with a interested in innovation, manufacturing, industrial arts, engineering, academia, entrepreneurs, economist, Bankers and investors.

  • @meh23p
    @meh23p7 жыл бұрын

    As to the environmental benefits, the energy cost of global shipping is tiny compared to that of producing the goods themselves.

  • @coledirnbeck3869
    @coledirnbeck38697 жыл бұрын

    I'm not very old, but from what I can understand from this "fourth industrial revolution" a lot of things need to happen in order for it to reach its full potential. Additionally, this coudl be a great opportunity to bring back over sea jobs back into their original native countries.

  • @munkhtogtpurevdash3159
    @munkhtogtpurevdash31596 жыл бұрын

    super man and super ideas and conclusion thank u so much

  • @moragil1
    @moragil16 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. Thanks.

  • @RamonKauling
    @RamonKauling7 жыл бұрын

    “Anyone who believes in indefinite growth in anything physical, on a physically finite planet, is either mad or an economist.” ― Kenneth E. Boulding

  • @VitalyPolovin

    @VitalyPolovin

    3 жыл бұрын

    Growth is improvement, innovation, and higher standard of living for all. You may already have it all, but others do not. Be open minded.

  • @JonnyMarshall5
    @JonnyMarshall57 жыл бұрын

    The need for growth in a capitalistic, consumerist-driven society is like a smoker's need for a lung transplant. Sure, we can celebrate growth stimulation, just as we can celebrate our new improved medical advancements to perform a more efficient transplant, but it's not really getting to the root of the problem. What we need is a combination of carbon footprint reducing methods of production, as well as a MASSIVE reduction of consumerism. We need to start sharing resources on a scale we've never seen before. If you only measure growth by economic output and not economic efficiency, then the planet's life support is eventually going to give way.

  • @andrewgordon235

    @andrewgordon235

    5 жыл бұрын

    Socialism is death it certainly killed Europe and Latin America. Taking people's stuff and giving it to other people so they will love you is an unsustainable 19th-century idea that has never lived up to the hype.

  • @roguenation6720

    @roguenation6720

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's def a good idea but it will need to start up something, small something simple like maybe clothing aesthetics to be more eco friendly reusable, now I'm not gonna say I'm a Einstein and know were to start but I think that would still be a perfect place to start since well.. most people wear clothes 😂

  • @mw123lover

    @mw123lover

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@andrewgordon235 but capitalism is in the end even worse becuse people are just a statistic

  • @muresandani

    @muresandani

    4 жыл бұрын

    *Posted from my Iphone X*

  • @bocskaicsaba4925
    @bocskaicsaba49257 жыл бұрын

    1. If labor taxing policies remain similar, robots will work and humans will die of poverty. Except the rich businessmen, of course. 2. The promise of a better future brought by new technology is like anesthesia before torture to death. With a few exceptions, technology has nothing to do with good life.

  • @phuyem

    @phuyem

    7 жыл бұрын

    People with low intelligent (like you) wont die, but living with minimum income / gov aids. People with good brain (like me) will find a way to enjoy technology advance instead of whining

  • @bocskaicsaba4925

    @bocskaicsaba4925

    7 жыл бұрын

    :))

  • @phuyem

    @phuyem

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** Glad you are not offended LOL. well seriously, it is unavoidable, we have to deal with it sooner or later

  • @xifongchristian1066

    @xifongchristian1066

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Pham He probably is offended. He just doesn't want to sink to your level of mental constriction. Can you not see that massively unequal distribution is actually going to neutralise the benefit of technological advances unless it is solved? + I hope English is not your first language

  • @phuyem

    @phuyem

    7 жыл бұрын

    Xifong Christian why bringing English here? How are you gonna define / measure / enforce "equal distribution" ? Are you gonna follow the Soviet style ? Or confiscate Bill Gates, Warren , etc.. income ? Anyway, distribute don't have much ( if any) to do with technology. It is political/economical rules. I hope you know what you are talking about

  • @MacoveiVlad
    @MacoveiVlad7 жыл бұрын

    As a previous TED talk pointed out, when countries don't have assets in other countries it is easier for them to be aggressive towards each other. We have to be interdependent to not start pointless fights. If everybody is self sufficient it can easily adopt a "f**k the rest" attitude. Also, currently robotic production generates individual wealth, not social equity. Parts of the advantages identified in this talk are real but the implementation is the real hard part. How to produce locally but still be interdependent enough to maintain peace? How to automate production and not increase the income gap and even reduce it? If i recall correctly in one of those Zeitgeist movies it was proposed that the machines should work for all of us. But that sound a little to close to the socialist doctrina where the wealth resulted from labor is equally spread to the population. And it might have the same disadvantages that type of society has. This is a really hard problem to solve and it appears we will need to face it in the not so near future...

  • @akirabrr
    @akirabrr7 жыл бұрын

    when you are going to talk about the central bank shark that sucks all the wealth?

  • @markm0000

    @markm0000

    7 жыл бұрын

    ahhh the black hole in the room. Yeah, it's never going away.

  • @d0themath284

    @d0themath284

    7 жыл бұрын

    well, according to hawking radiation...

  • @youareajackass2005

    @youareajackass2005

    7 жыл бұрын

    pentagon said that lost 10 trillion

  • @Imtheonlyoneinmymind
    @Imtheonlyoneinmymind7 жыл бұрын

    That was utterly un-enlightening.

  • @TT-ud5gf
    @TT-ud5gf6 жыл бұрын

    This video shows caption in Vietnamese. It's great and is there a particular reason?

  • @EcstasyTiger
    @EcstasyTiger7 жыл бұрын

    We're entering an age in which universal income is essential. Getting rid of neoliberalism would also help everything human.

  • @dud5606

    @dud5606

    7 жыл бұрын

    You know that will never happen.

  • @bock228

    @bock228

    7 жыл бұрын

    Dude,our system works with an economic paradigm , money has to go! And those monster we call bankers and CEO's from big corporations have to pay for what they done to humanity

  • @Fotsirvelk

    @Fotsirvelk

    7 жыл бұрын

    Universal income sounds nice but it still involves paying taxes to hand out the universal income. Why not make stuff extremely cheap, like their real value. Why does a bread cost money, actually? With all these technology and machinery a bread could be made for 10 cents. The rest of the bread price is tax.

  • @MenachemMGreen

    @MenachemMGreen

    7 жыл бұрын

    +bock228 I love it...but what will we be doing all day? Utopia I guess...regardless how will the robots conquer greed? The greedy will be creating the robots for us to party?

  • @nikolov901

    @nikolov901

    7 жыл бұрын

    Because that's how you incentivize innovation. If there is no incentive for the top 10% of people to push themselves to the limit and beyond, the system will stagnate and become corrupt. You can't ask people to cut their personal lives in half for the majority of their time on Earth to make innovation happen while you are at home with your family, reading books and going on vacations and give them nothing in return.

  • @RowanGontier
    @RowanGontier7 жыл бұрын

    Growth does not equal production increases. Demand also matters. GDP growth is not the only measure of wealth. It is possible to have greater wealth with lower production, by for example durable products and the sharing economy. Still, the next wave of manufacturing is probably as the speaker says.

  • @eudyptesspheniscidae7360
    @eudyptesspheniscidae73607 жыл бұрын

    very interesting video, I love the french accent😀🇧🇪

  • @anassidimohamed8315
    @anassidimohamed83152 жыл бұрын

    What about un employment with this 4th economic revolution?

  • @leanpartner9971
    @leanpartner99717 жыл бұрын

    Just wondering when and how the manufacturing revolution (4.0) gets its maturity to support the idea it derived from. If you take a look at the principles of TPS (TOYOTA PRODUCTION SYSTEM) based on staff minds and skills to create value in any step they take in order to optimize process and build the competitive edge, you will know why this company is so effective. Automatization in this particular matter such as 4.0 does not mean to be a step with the wrong foot, but is it ready to think in KAIZEN way - create value steps instead of speeding up waste? // The idea to write in here crossed my mind when recalling a visit in Japan, Nagoya, Motomachi TOYOTA plant with German process engineers who got to know that their internal logistics based on robots is way less efficient than this one we could see at TOYOTA created by shop floor people during KAIZEN sessions...Eiji Toyoda used to say "Before cars, make people" is it still valid?

  • @61shirley
    @61shirley7 жыл бұрын

    State regulation squashes competition in the market place because only big companies can deal with it. Competition is what drives innovation and growth.

  • @fatalmystic

    @fatalmystic

    7 жыл бұрын

    i think human curiosity and the motivation to create drive innovation. competition simply makes me want to win, as long as i can win with less effort than innovation requires, i'll always choose the other way. be it cartels, corruption, patents, marketing, etc. ... innovation is an optional strategy in this game. and in the real world economy we see how corruption strumps innovation like 9 out of 10 times...

  • @61shirley

    @61shirley

    7 жыл бұрын

    +fatalmystic people have always been curious and motivated. Under a free market system it's much easier to achieve your goals. Countries that move away from free market principles always lower the standard of living and ability to succeed

  • @RochesterOliveira
    @RochesterOliveira7 жыл бұрын

    I think most people that are criticizing are missing the point here. He said some cool things about downscalling and agile / lean concepts that we could incorporate for a better development. It isn't just robots+ 3d printing, it's a new way of thinking, we can't just rely on china / india for cheaper products and grow for the sake or growth

  • @overseachininadoll
    @overseachininadoll7 жыл бұрын

    classic old designs and styles are really cool and timeless you may called them the retro etc. In fact they are way better than many of trendy garbages.

  • @pawanchopra6679
    @pawanchopra66793 жыл бұрын

    Productivity is biggest driver of growth .it will come from innovative ways to doing things rather than with digital technology only...

  • @ArnieG16
    @ArnieG167 жыл бұрын

    That weirdly funny moment when you close your eyes and imagine Inspector Jacques Clouseau (from Pink Panther movies) ramble on about this in his French accent. :P

  • @elinope4745
    @elinope47457 жыл бұрын

    i don't like his proposed solution. but i don't see many others and it seems that he is going to be right whether we like it or not. so although i don't like the talk, i "liked" the talk, because it is necessary. this does sound like the future of manufacturing, and it may be the best we can do.

  • @tejedazamudiosantiago7697
    @tejedazamudiosantiago76977 жыл бұрын

    La situación en la actualidad nos indica que los modelos de producción están resultando obsoletos a corto tiempo, lo cual propicia el empleo de mejores tecnologías para lograr una mayor productividad mediante el empleo de mano de obra realmente capacitada para el desempeño de estas actividades. La era del empleo de tecnologías robóticas en nuestras fabricas en un periodo no mayor de 20 años se hace cada vez más imprescindible. La tecnología de las impresiones en 3D augura un desarrollo jamás antes visto en los modelos de producción anteriores implementados durante las revoluciones industriales tecnológicas pasadas.

  • @FINALB
    @FINALB7 жыл бұрын

    Manufacturing advanced robots for complex and non repetitive tasks. There it goes a lot of people going out of jobs.

  • @Seiaeka

    @Seiaeka

    7 жыл бұрын

    If your job can be done by a robot, you should be using your amazing human mind and capabilities to do something more productive. And yes, I have been replaced by automation before as well. You're allowed to be salty about it, but it doesn't change anything.

  • @BlueyMcPhluey

    @BlueyMcPhluey

    7 жыл бұрын

    time for a Basic Income then

  • @FINALB

    @FINALB

    7 жыл бұрын

    Advanced robots and AI, meaning advanced and complex tasks in a new way than it is currently happening with automation. The more complex it is the AI, the worse is the impact for a lot of families in a long term, more thousands of people will have no jobs or have worse income than currently it is now even when they have multiple jobs, regardless of their capabilities and skills, no jobs or low income in a long term it is not a positive thing at all, I've seen it with many people, increasing insecurity and unstable wealth for a lot of families worldwide, poorer education, among other negative things.

  • @holleey

    @holleey

    7 жыл бұрын

    why would there be a need for money to make a living when there are no jobs left? obviously there isn't. so to me, the decline of jobs is generally a good thing. however, the transition might be rough...

  • @metalhulk105

    @metalhulk105

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Seiaeka AI can be as intelligent as the humans. In future they can be a lot more intelligent than the humans. I doubt if at that stage humans could actually do something "more". The way I see it - Man + Computer > Computer. Humans must complement computers.

  • @deadmoldable
    @deadmoldable6 жыл бұрын

    his statement at 0:56 about technology revolution at the 70s having impact on growth doesnt seem to correlate to growth diagram.

  • @winomaster
    @winomaster6 жыл бұрын

    We can't assume that "experts" like this know much about the road ahead. But there are visionaries like Jobs and others that see the way forward in their narrow field. And it is the collective efforts of these visionaries that make up the coming revolution. I tend to doubt the greatest returns will be had eliminating unskilled, unintelligent labor. The highest returns may be had freeing up the most intelligent sectors of labor. And seeing that our intellectual elites are well funded in the research that creates the greatest growth. We need to establish what economy sectors will provide the greatest prosperity. Perhaps, space mining, cures for diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer's, alcoholism and drug addiction. Low cost energy, more efficient batteries, lower cost access to space, and transportation improvements.

  • @javierjaime9386
    @javierjaime93866 жыл бұрын

    The service sector keeps growing.

  • @cryomancer20x68
    @cryomancer20x687 жыл бұрын

    I am a 15 year machinist. I have to respectfully disagree that 3d printing in most cases increases productivity. Additive processes ( while necessary to produce certain things like carbon fiber wings) will be much slower and more expensive for a long time to come. 3D printing some of the plastic parts I make which cannot be injection molded would take 8-9 hours. The same part (including the creation of the plastic) will become a finished part in a total of around 16 minutes.

  • @tjr3145
    @tjr31457 жыл бұрын

    This is the exact plot of the "Speed Racer" live action movie.

  • @kkk97295
    @kkk972955 жыл бұрын

    very clear, concise lecture on 4th industrial revolution. Thanks!!

  • @adaseth
    @adaseth6 жыл бұрын

    There are three major revolutions named in the talk, and yet the graph of productivity presented during the talk no sign of productivity bump is visible in corresponding dates. Growth is slumping because we are reaching the limits of what we responsibly can extract from the Earth.

  • @skipgiblets
    @skipgiblets4 жыл бұрын

    I would like to know where he is getting his data from

  • @VijayaRohithK
    @VijayaRohithK7 жыл бұрын

    Watching KZread @ Work. Well he caught me there :P

  • @jamescarter4836
    @jamescarter48365 жыл бұрын

    can someone give me a clear cut definition of social manufacturing? lament terms please

  • @andrewgordon235
    @andrewgordon2355 жыл бұрын

    Where the distributed manufacturers make their mistake is allowing free downloading of schematics to build things. Schematics should be streamed like music or video content on a pay for play basis allowing payment to be made to the creator of the idea every time it is used. The cost of raw materials needed + payment to the creator of the design + service charge to the local automated manufacturing facility for the manufacture of said product should determine the cost of goods. Streaming servers can actually hold the data and deliver a single copy communicating it directly to the licensed automated manufacturing facility ensuring profits are made and taxes are paid. This would prevent economic anarchy.

  • @SexualPotatoes
    @SexualPotatoes7 жыл бұрын

    He spent the entire talk talking about a technology we all know about (and was mentioned in Ted several times) like it's something new

  • @JonathanHartwig

    @JonathanHartwig

    7 жыл бұрын

    Eh, I'd argue it was less about technology and more about economic models, but I'll agree that if you're a standard TED viewer you've heard a lot of this already.

  • @SexualPotatoes

    @SexualPotatoes

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** It's just that he built this huge mystery around it throughout the entire talk, I would have preferred it if he just got to the point from the start, revealing the innovation is 3D printing and going right into the economic models. But you're totally right.

  • @prepressdept8424
    @prepressdept84247 жыл бұрын

    This does not change the present model for employment, it simply downscale its with a ridiculous price tag.

  • @julieta203
    @julieta2033 жыл бұрын

    Growth only matters in a fractional reserve debt based monetary system. A system that is now nearing its end.

  • @storegga
    @storegga7 жыл бұрын

    he says "Robot" like Dr. Zoidberg- "ROBUT" .... (seriously... insightful & inflaming talk, spoken in better English than even I can speak)

  • @whitelightning7847
    @whitelightning78475 жыл бұрын

    Finally a sensible talk

  • @tanyakruyt5122
    @tanyakruyt51225 жыл бұрын

    I hope so!

  • @decimated550
    @decimated5507 жыл бұрын

    4:35 productivity is on the decline, even with the internet. why? we watch videos at work on our phones or screens.

  • @YouHolli
    @YouHolli7 жыл бұрын

    When all simple jobs are done by robots, what happens to the simple minded?

  • @rawstarmusic

    @rawstarmusic

    7 жыл бұрын

    They are a majority and there is no plan for that. It will coma like a surprise. They will want food and other groups will constantly chase them away. Perhaps camps will be reintroduced where billions will live their life.

  • @zackboner

    @zackboner

    7 жыл бұрын

    They don't reproduce as frequently, and a new generation of intelligent humans is formed.

  • @rawstarmusic

    @rawstarmusic

    7 жыл бұрын

    Simple minded produce more offspring.

  • @MrKirbinio

    @MrKirbinio

    7 жыл бұрын

    Death !

  • @Winchestro

    @Winchestro

    7 жыл бұрын

    There are no "simple minded" humans, unless you are talking about people who suffered brain damage. People who decide to do the least cognitive development and work they need will continue to do so when this minimum changes. Plebs will just have fewer topics they can refuse to learn because "they don't need them".

  • @alikazemi5491
    @alikazemi54916 жыл бұрын

    Michael Spence, a Nobel Prize laureate who is also an emeritus professor at Stanford, Said: “Missing from growth are many things: health, distributional aspects of growth patterns, sense of security, freedoms of various kinds, leisure broadly defined, and more.” A new economy could also focus more on the health of the environment. For half a century, developed nations have focused on how to make their economies grow faster, hoping that strong growth would improve life for all their populations. But what if growth isn’t the key to raising the standard of living across a society? Many economists are now challenging the view, that Economy needs to grow every year, arguing that it makes more sense to focus on measures of well-being other than growth. After all, despite a growth rate that has averaged three percent over the last 60 years (which is quite robust), there are still 43 million Americans living in poverty, and most people’s wages are essentially unchanged from the end of the Reagan administration. There is a significant economic gap, (a shrinking middle class). In fact, the median income of households in 2014 was 4 percent lower than it was in 2000, despite positive economic growth in all but two of the years during that time period. And if you consider environmental pollution (oceans and deforestation, clean water) it getting worst every year! SO what is the real value of this year after year Economic Growth? Nature is far more complex system that any of our economies? It creates local growths in a dynamic system which achieves equilibrium but over all it demonstrates zero growth!

  • @StrechFilm
    @StrechFilm7 жыл бұрын

    Olivier Scalabre: Guys, we have an issue. Audience: Puhaha Olivier Scalabre: I can't speak English. Audience: Puhaha x 3

  • @standupforgood7810
    @standupforgood78107 жыл бұрын

    "I hope the Ai is nice to us" -Elon Musk

  • @rawstarmusic

    @rawstarmusic

    7 жыл бұрын

    Why would it be? We represent many emotional complications, not recognized by AI. Any attempt to reprogram AI will be seen as a downgrade of efficiency. Traveling some thousands years to another planet will produce complains amongst humans who want their own wife and family. Humans and AI aren't compatible.

  • @CB-sf6fp
    @CB-sf6fp7 жыл бұрын

    If you're expecting to show a graph and be taken seriously, you had better cite your sources, and they'd better be good.

  • @junliyan5034
    @junliyan50346 жыл бұрын

    I would say Alibaba had already reached 17.8 billion dollars sales on single day.

  • @krool1648
    @krool16487 жыл бұрын

    Personal growth is far more important than economic and technological growth.

  • @SouvikDas123
    @SouvikDas1237 жыл бұрын

    The idea of domestic manufacturing is nice. This is somewhat PolyRegionalistic Globalisation.

  • @tuliobouzas
    @tuliobouzas6 жыл бұрын

    First, the guy shows economies that were still on a process of rebuilding their capital stock after getting wrecked in a war (Japan and Germany) seeing their growth rate decline after the 1960s (ignoring how much subtler that fall was for the US, also plotted on the graph). That's no surprise, if anything it's common place in economic growth theory. Then, he says that producing abroad doesn't imply increased productivity, especially after the initially low wages start to rise. Well, actually, it does - to the underdevelopped economy that receives the investment -, the wage growth being an evidence to that. Then, the guy shows a graph that demonstrates the decrease in productivity GROWTH, and says productivity is declining worldwide (when in fact the graph only shows it's increasing slower). At last, he says poduction scale will decrease - ironically in a world in which fixed capital will be much bigger, without presenting any convincig argument for such a counterintuitive statement. And even goes as far as saying that's good for emerging economies, despite the disinvestment it represents and the fact most of them are far behind the mature economies in Research and Development. I don't wanna be a troll, but, correct me if I'm wrong, I think this lecture was deeply misinformative.

  • @donaldhobson8873
    @donaldhobson88737 жыл бұрын

    Why do we need growth. Can't we get to a point where everyone has enough and say that we are big enough. There isn't room to grow forever.

  • @panpiper

    @panpiper

    7 жыл бұрын

    Back in the 1960's and 70's, half the world was starving. Nowadays only ten percent don't have enough quality food. That improvement was made solely through growth. We grew the economies of those peoples to the point where they were no longer starving. In the process, also due to the growth that vastly improved their standards of living, we also slowed down the population explosion, massively. By most accounts, the human population growth is expected to stop this century at somewhere around 11 billion people, assuming the increase in standards of living continues. The surest way to guarantee that human population growth does not stop, and the most certain path to the disaster you fear, is to stop the growth in the standard of living of the world's current poor. That is why we need growth.

  • @donaldhobson8873

    @donaldhobson8873

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree. we need growth in the standard of living for the poorest in society. But growth on its own is not good or bad. We don't need growth in the rich being marketed ever more tat. We need to grow or reorganize so that everyone has enough and we are using resources sustainability. I suspect that if current resources were used for the common good and shared equally that everyone could have an adequate standard of living.

  • @panpiper

    @panpiper

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Donald Hobson The sad reality is that the instant you start 'sharing equally' for the 'common good', you wind up with a shrinking pie and ultimately everyone worse off, except for the ruling class of course. You need freedom for far more than freedom itself, freedom ultimately is the machine that produces the very wealth socialists want to share. Sadly with freedom comes both inequity and responsibility. A person is necessarily responsible for themselves to the direct proportion they are free, and vice versa, a person is only as free as they are responsible for themselves. Many, if not most people in society, eschew the responsibility side of the freedom coin, and are more than willing to throw out freedom for the sake of not having to be responsible for themselves. Sadly for them, they almost always wind up far worse off as a result, as the state quite frankly doesn't give a damn about the individuals that comprise society. The state cares about the state.

  • @neonicecube908

    @neonicecube908

    7 жыл бұрын

    If we need to grow or not depends on what we want to archive. Look at population growth, it seems to start regulating itself in japan but the authorities think its a bad thing. In Afrika people have like 5+ children, Europe 1-2. In the past it was harsher, out of these 5 3 died now it starts to change with help and medicine. When they get to the same level of development as japan they are also going to have only one child. hope this makes sense

  • @tegridy9569
    @tegridy95697 жыл бұрын

    I don't envy ppl who listened to him live, without subtitles.

  • @antonditt1661
    @antonditt16615 жыл бұрын

    Due to the comments, many people don't get the message. Bad luck for theem

  • @lookatmySB
    @lookatmySB7 жыл бұрын

    sustainable growth. because we dont have enough products yet, we dont need enough resources yet. there will always be a limit to growth, and there will always be change happening. the higher you fly the deeper you fall.

  • @luisrogelio98
    @luisrogelio986 жыл бұрын

    I can't wait for the day where the world problems will be about who has more land to their name at Mars

  • @MrBeanbones
    @MrBeanbones5 жыл бұрын

    We need to turn that production line into a closed loop, make trash and sewage new resources for an united world where humanity and nature can live together. The problem is, rich corporations are naturally greed and are not whiling to a big change in the structure of the economy.

  • @eunjoominc8399
    @eunjoominc83993 жыл бұрын

    Korean Transalation need to be corrected. Offshore is not 해안 Offshore is not in their territory. e.g. Offshore manufatcruting of zara production means that zara operates its clothing manufacturing facility not in the spain but other country.

  • @peterhan2449
    @peterhan24497 жыл бұрын

    Let me ask you guys something Does 'Efficient productivity' means companies don't need many people to work for them?? Therefore many workers may get lost their jobs, Aren't they?

  • @prestoncopeland587
    @prestoncopeland5875 жыл бұрын

    We have no vision of consequences when we produce. We think progress is success, but without moral forethought, technology will lead to dangerous times for human beings.

  • @boresolenne9468
    @boresolenne94687 жыл бұрын

    4:36 ce n'est pas la productivité décline, c'est qu'elle n'augmente pas! Elle stagne. c'est très différent 4:36 It is not that productivity declines is that it does not increase! It stagnates. it is very different

  • @gaurabkhetan789
    @gaurabkhetan7897 жыл бұрын

    How do you define productivity here??

  • @kkknotcool

    @kkknotcool

    6 жыл бұрын

    GDP Gross Domestic product How much product a country makes before costs.

  • @rawstarmusic
    @rawstarmusic7 жыл бұрын

    It is english but it's spoken in a totally other way. The hardest accent for me to handle is the india-english. Most of the time I miss the content, very frustrating. I can follow along this french although it's a strong accent indeed.

  • @maxi-me
    @maxi-me5 жыл бұрын

    Sound like we'll have to retrain our workforce to not desire employment.

  • @huynhngoctai-peter5135
    @huynhngoctai-peter51355 жыл бұрын

    The problem is, even after the fourth revolution of the world, we still have to face huge problems because technology is rapidly developing and this is a good thing though, but the problems are that these machines will soon replace the need of labor or workers. Making the distinguish between rich and poor is completely different, the rich will be richer, but the poor will remain the poor and can not rise up if only they have enough knowledge to rise up, but this place soon also be taken by the AI tech in few more years, and what might come to the poverty? Maybe they never get the see what the rich people are seeing and only sitting down there waiting for the support from the charity, but that is the positive point than thinking about the world being destroyed by AI if they are intelligent enough to know why they have to work for the human, and then the war began, making thousands of people died and boom, the world will soon be destroyed and the top chart species will be replaced by the things that human created by their own because of the power of technology the robots are holding at that time, so nothing would be resolve, the end :v!

  • @Candy-ty6gk
    @Candy-ty6gk2 жыл бұрын

    i have worked in manufacturing for over 40 years and they thought they would replace people with computer numerical control machine tools, well it didn't happen. there are too many variables for robots to contend with. besides we already have rapid prototyping, but very few people running the machines know or understand how to program them. yea lets make more stuff, like that will make a difference when most folks don't have the money to buy anything.

  • @mad_titanthanos

    @mad_titanthanos

    2 жыл бұрын

    So any idea how to inorove it and bring more production output?

  • @MsOpal55

    @MsOpal55

    Жыл бұрын

    They told us about those robots when I was a child and teenager in the 60s and 70s. No one would do hard labour anymore and robots would serve us personally. Still waiting... Now I don't see any progress without any chips available anywhere.

  • @haohuich
    @haohuich7 жыл бұрын

    I am out once I saw the chart at the beginning.

  • @mun6138
    @mun61385 жыл бұрын

    I’m watching this for an assignment and his accent is aggravating me

  • @caquitows
    @caquitows7 жыл бұрын

    Just saw Tank Girl and Wall-E incoming with this guy talking...

  • @kernel_cataclysm7306
    @kernel_cataclysm73067 жыл бұрын

    Just wondering where those 'more jobs' will come from. We are already producing more than we need and now he wants to 'add' machines that increase output ~20%. ... Isn't it more realistic that they will replace workers at roughly constant output? Plus, he's saying that we don't need to "painstakingly assemble" complex parts anymore because the 3D printer does it all in one go. So he wants to create jobs by replacing the people making the individual parts and the people assembling them into usable objects by creating one job for one engineer who does the 3D modelling of the usable objects and feeds them into the 3D printer? ... the 3D printer that does all these other steps fully automated? I'm not good in maths but that doesn't sound like a correct calculation to me.

  • @svanteekholm7334

    @svanteekholm7334

    7 жыл бұрын

    Good analysis. In fact, most researchers today agree that while we have growth in the economy through the technological revolution, we are losing jobs. It's called technological unemployment (google that) and most politicians seem utterly unaware of it. They're stuck in the century old 'create new jobs' way of thinking and equating economic growth to more jobs. It's not happening. On top of that, sustainable growth is a oxymoron in itself and consider how money is being redistributed long-term here. Not having a job is a bad thing in today's economy while the fact that not everyone have to work in order to produce everything we need should be a good one. We're in for some foundational changes in how the economy works in the next few decades.

  • @kernel_cataclysm7306

    @kernel_cataclysm7306

    7 жыл бұрын

    Svante Ekholm Yes that is basically what I tell to my friends as well. If one starts to read up on what's up and coming in terms of tech we are about to face such fundamental changes. I call it the superstar economy. Because of easy and near costless replication only the absolute super skilled stars will remain employed (the 3D modeller,s the exceptional scientist and surgeon). Because much of their output will be so easy and cheap to reproduce that you don't need the mediocre producers anymore. The superstars will earn exceptional incomes while the rest goes .... yeah, were does the rest go?

  • @JonathanHartwig
    @JonathanHartwig7 жыл бұрын

    Don't scroll down. Comments are exactly what you'd expect.

  • @HexHyte

    @HexHyte

    7 жыл бұрын

    Cliché, i was doing exactly this.

  • @MattyP62618
    @MattyP626187 жыл бұрын

    If anyone is interested in a more in depth look at this subject area I would suggest reading Paul Mason's Post Capitalism. It basically says everything this video says except the end point looks nothin like capitalism.

  • @nikolov901

    @nikolov901

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. Every time someone says utopia is the way to go things go very well!

  • @MattyP62618

    @MattyP62618

    7 жыл бұрын

    +nikolov901 what are you talking about? Have you even red the book I mentioned? Besides how is thinkin up alternatives to capitalism (or even for that matter that it might end) utopian?

  • @nikolov901

    @nikolov901

    7 жыл бұрын

    What he proposes is utopian. What he proposes requires perfectly good humans. Humans are not perfectly good. Far from it. They are greedy and corrupt, no matter the political/economical system. Pretending they are good is dangerous. Please don't pretend and don't agitate other people to pretend.

  • @MattyP62618

    @MattyP62618

    7 жыл бұрын

    +nikolov901 no more of an assumption that certain capitalist ideologies make assuming that all people are rational actors. Besides that's not the main point of his argument, in fact I struggle to think of anywhere in the book where people are put into arbitrary terms such as "good" and "bad". Have you even read it? I think the analysis on the future of capitalist economics is a far more significant & well developed part of Mason's analysis compared to how he feels about people.

  • @nikolov901

    @nikolov901

    7 жыл бұрын

    So you are saying that his premises is not important? Got it.

  • @op-tim_auto
    @op-tim_auto7 жыл бұрын

    Is it just me or what he describes as being the 4-th manufacturing revolution started already in Elon Musk's Tesla and SpaceX bussiness? Automated production, vertical integration, local development of manufacturing and so on..

  • @ray1411
    @ray14116 жыл бұрын

    He says manufacturing will become regional but, sadly, he neglected to clearly state that a lot of this “manufacturing” will-obviously-become automated, with very few humans manning consoles to control the “robots” that’ll do a bulk of the work.

  • @aniellocelentano8427
    @aniellocelentano84276 жыл бұрын

    Yes manufacturing revolution

  • @georgelazenkas8027
    @georgelazenkas80273 жыл бұрын

    So did he say that growth was unsustainable and didn’t work 3 times let’s do a 4th 👌

  • @CyclingSalmon14
    @CyclingSalmon147 жыл бұрын

    Robots...Robots replaceing us all.

  • @mirageinmercuryshadow
    @mirageinmercuryshadow7 жыл бұрын

    This guys is life draining I can't make it through the video

  • @eljorisluypaert
    @eljorisluypaert7 жыл бұрын

    Hmmm. I see a problem with this quote: "A system which relies on infinite growth and infinite consumption has no long term future on a planet with limited resources." And yet, there is for instance a limited supply of oxygen on this planet. We have used all of it up many times... and still life is possible, we -and life- are still here... Maybe there is something wrong with this oversimplified 'limited growth' model. Maybe an infinite use of resources isn't necessarily a problem.

  • @shake6321
    @shake63217 жыл бұрын

    Our debt based money system forces us to have infinite growth. End the Fed. End Gov borrowing.

  • @EliaPoli
    @EliaPoli7 жыл бұрын

    But the "Growth" does really mean "happiness" ? Personally I prefer a country that isn't constantly growing up, but that is able to protect citizen from recession. Because it's impossible have always "the growth".

  • @jspin3609
    @jspin36097 жыл бұрын

    That growth might be hindered however by the fact that this technology (edit: has the potential) to eliminate any job that involves a human behind the wheel of a car. 30 years from now truck drivers, taxi drivers (especially), and others will lost to automated vehicles. These jobs will go the way of farming. How will this growth be supported when the service industry takes this hard of a hit.

  • @CJusticeHappen21
    @CJusticeHappen217 жыл бұрын

    TGFS Thank Google For Subtitles.

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