Notes from Chapter 10: Society and Technological Change

The ideas and examples referenced below are notes compiled by Robert Keel from his reading of Volti, Rudi. 2014. Society and Technological Change. 7th edition. New York, NY: Worth Publishers. They are intended for classroom

TECHNOLOGY AND JOBS: MORE OF ONE AND LESS OF THE OTHER?

The Threat of Machine-Made Unemployment

The Technological Threat in Historical Perspective

A Case for Optimism

How Technology Creates Jobs

COMPUTERS

"In 1963 one economist warned that American households were saturated with domestic appliances, resulting in a stagnant market for manufactured goods; the only significant new product was the electric can opener." (page 187).

Indirect Effects of New Technology on Employment

The Machines Aren’t Ready to Take Over

Technology, Jobs and The Changing Structure of The Economy

Technology and the Distribution of Income

Technology, Globalization and Jobs

Rebounding from Job Losses

Ups and Downs

Questions (page 199):

  1. List a few jobs that have been rendered obsolete by technological change. Are some of these jobs so unpleasant that they are better done by machines? On the whole, have more "good" jobs or "bad" jobs been eliminated by technological advance?
  2. What new products and services have been created by technological advance during the past 20 years or so? To what extent are they "essential" parts of contemporary life?
  3. Is there anything problematic about an economy that centers on the production of services instead of the production of goods? Is a country with such an economy in an inherently dangerous position when it confronts international economic and political competition?
  4. In what ways is economic globalization similar to technological change in regard to job losses? Does it make sense to try to block either technological change or economic globalization in order to preserve jobs?
  5. Should federal and local governments come to the aid of workers who have lost their jobs because of globalization and technological change: Is this a legitimate role of government? If so, what sort of policies and programs might be formulated to meet workers' needs?

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Chapter 11

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/280/soctechchange/soctech10.htm
Owner: Robert O. Keel: rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated: Thursday, November 19, 2015 14:29