The Digital Revolution of Artificial Intelligence: Beneficial Economic Creative Destruction or Systemic Dehumanization.
Wednesday March 6, 2024
By Dr. Rodrigue Tremblay.
Emeritus professor of economics and international finance, UniversitĂ© de MontrĂ©al, and of the book about morals "The Code for Global Ethics" and the book about geopolitics "The New American Empire")
"The opening up of new markets, foreign or domestic, and the organizational development... incessantly
 revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly 
destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. That process of 
creative destruction is the essential fact about capitalism."  Joseph Schumpeter (1883-1950), American economist and political thinker of Austrian origin, in his book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, 1942.
"Every change is a menace to stability.  That's
 another reason why we're so chary of applying new inventions. Every 
discovery in pure science is potentially subversive; even science must 
sometimes be treated as a possible enemy. Yes, even science." Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), British author of the 1932 futuristic novel Brave New World, ch.16.
"Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards." Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), British author, in his essay 'Adonis and the Alphabet', 1956.
"Our entire much-praised technological progress, and civilization generally, could be compared to an axe in the hand of a pathological criminal." Albert Einstein (1879-1955), German-born theoretical physicist, 1917.
"Artificial Intelligence (AI) is probably the most important thing humanity has ever worked on. I think of it as something more profound than electricity or fire." Sundar Picha (1972- ), chief executive officer (CEO) of Alphabet Inc. and of its subsidiary Google, in 2018.
• Introduction
The digital revolution of Artificial Intelligence (AI), currently evolving very rapidly, is a technological innovation that uses complex computer programs and sophisticated mathematical algorithms. These robotic systems and AI-based models, powered by AI chips
 and using super computers, can automate repetitive tasks, produce texts
 and quickly process vast quantities of data, in complementarity with 
humans.
However, beyond the economic benefits that would result, there is the threat of a gradual replacement of human beings by intelligent robots, in a number of functions and activities that lend themselves to such a substitution.
Such
 technological advances have great potential to profoundly upend 
national economies, businesses and societies in decades to come, when 
new capital investments replace older obsolete capital investments, and 
some categories of workers would be replaced by intelligent machines 
that require more specialized workers.
This could even possibly lead to a dystopian 'Brave New World',
 if autonomous brain-machines, in the next futuristic era, are capable 
of self-improvement and are able to think by themselves, and possibly, 
could even learn to program other brainy machines, with hardly any human
 input.
• The global impact of industrial revolutions
All technological inventions produce positive advances but can also be accompanied by various disruptions and negative effects.
For
 example, the invention of the knife, which can be used to cut bread; 
but it also enables one to cut someone's throat. Likewise, the invention
 of dynamite
 and explosives helped the mining industry, but it also made wars 
deadlier and increased the destructive power of terrorists tenfold.
The same is true of the discovery of the fission of the atom, which led to the development of nuclear energy. This invention made it possible to produce electricity; it also made it possible to build atomic bombs and destroy entire cities and their inhabitants.
It
 is difficult to know precisely, in advance, what purpose a new 
technology will serve, for good or for evil, for economic progress or 
for human regression.
• Questions raised by Artificial Intelligence (AI)
As
 with any new technology, the AI applications today and their 
generalization in the future will undoubtedly create winners and losers,
 and not only in the economic field, but also in politics, geopolitics, 
social affairs, biology, in arts and even in military conflicts. It is 
therefore important to assess whether the winners will be more numerous 
than the losers, or whether it will be rather the opposite, with a small
 number of successful operators and a large number of expendables.
For instance, what will be the consequences of so-called generative AI models,
 like Nvidia's AI systems or those of pre-programmed conversational 
robots, such as those of ChatGPT (Open AI), Copilot (Microsoft) or 
Gemini (Google), which can generate text, images or other creations? 
Will they improve the standard of living and the quality of life of the 
greatest number, or will they allow some to get rich, but render entire 
categories of workers obsolete and impoverished? In such case, they 
could end up increasing income and wealth disparities.
Indeed,
 each new industrial revolution in the past made some successful 
capitalist pioneers ultra rich. For instance, there was a period in the 
United States, in the late 19th century, called the era of the Robber Barons.
 It was a time characterized by rich monopolists (Carnegie, Rockefeller,
 Vanderbilt, Mellon, etc.), in the industries of steel, oil, railroads 
or finance, who crushed competitors, rigged markets, and corrupted 
governments.
At the 
political and geopolitical levels, is it possible nowadays that some 
malicious oligarchies could use such digital machines to better monitor 
and control people and to more easily launch wars in the future?
All of this is far from being of purely theoretical concerns. The U.S. Pentagon is already planning to use intelligent robots and drones, controlled by Artificial Intelligence, to wage the wars of the future.
• The short and medium term and longer term economic effects of AI and the four industrial revolutions since 1760
In
 economics, the notions of short-term (1-4 years), medium-term (4-9 
years) and long-term (10 years or more) can vary, depending on the 
economic and financial sectors. For the economy as a whole, it is 
possible to refer to short, medium and longer term economic business cycles.
 For example, many years passed between the invention of the first giant
 computer, as large as a building, in 1946, and the innovation of the 
portable computer on the computer market, in 1977, and then the arrival 
of Apple's Macintosh computers, in 1998.
The first industrial revolution
 (1760-1870) began in the mid-18th century in Britain, in the textile 
industry. For the first time in history, overall production and 
consumption in a country could grow faster than population, thanks to 
the productivity gains that technological innovations and production 
techniques made possible.
The
 discoveries of new sources of energy, such as those coming from gas and
 oil, in addition to that of coal, as well as electricity, were at the 
center of the second industrial revolution
 (1870-1914). This led to innovations in means of transport (railway, 
steamboat, automobile and airplane). Increased industrialization then 
caused a demographic migration from the countryside to the cities, which
 accentuated the phenomenon of urbanization, resulting in the creation of large cities and mega-metropolises with high population density.
The third industrial revolution
 (1930-2010) is characterized by the innovation of nuclear energy and 
the advent of the information age, mainly during the second part of the 
20th century. It was made possible by the invention of the 
microprocessor and by the creation of the first computers, followed by 
the innovation of the Internet, satellites and wireless communication.
As for the ongoing fourth industrial revolution (arising from applications of Artificial Intelligence, an expression first introduced in 2011,
 at a conference held in Germany to design a new industrial policy for 
that country based on high technology strategies), it would be wise to 
distinguish an initial period of shock and transition, and a longer 
period of gradual acceptance and maturity, which can extend over several
 decades, even a century or more.
• A
 difficult transition of layoffs, in the short and medium term, for 
workers in the tertiary sector most threatened by digitalization and 
automation
Already, 
institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the 
Goldman Sacks investment bank, among others, have attempted to quantify 
the net effect that applications of Artificial Intelligence will have on
 different categories of workers. For the IMF,
 40% of jobs in the world could be affected, in one way or another, by 
the development of AI. These will mainly be jobs in the tertiary service
 sector, which risk being replaced, or affected to varying degrees, by 
intelligent robots. Indeed, we can classify jobs likely to be affected 
in one way or another by AI systems in three categories:
1-
 jobs potentially substituted or replaced, (such as support or 
secretarial jobs in banks, insurance companies, accounting offices, 
libraries, and in activities of translation, dubbing, etc.);
2-
 jobs not threatened by AI because they are performed either outdoors or
 because they require physical activity ( e.g. carpenter, plumber, 
electrician, painter, roofer, hairdresser, etc.);
3-
 the vast majority of jobs will be influenced to a certain degree by AI,
 particularly in finance, education, health, medicine, engineering, 
administration, cybernetics, video games, etc.
For
 example, in a study published in March 2023, Goldman Sacks estimated 
how much Artificial Intelligence could influence employment for the 
entire American economy. Their conclusion was that AI could replace 7% 
of current jobs, mainly jobs of office and white-collar workers, in 
years to come. However, the majority of jobs, 63% of the total, can be 
expected to be complementary to AI, would benefit from productivity 
gains and could even increase in importance. On the other hand, some 30%
 of jobs, mainly manual jobs, would hardly or not at all be affected by 
AI.
• The role of politics, supervision and regulation of applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
The
 Artificial Intelligence revolution can undoubtedly both replace and 
create jobs, and, by increasing labor productivity, create wealth. 
However, this risks causing some upheaval in certain labor markets and 
resulting in significant layoffs of workers in some industries.
This
 is why governments, responsible for the general interest, must ensure 
that there are no major economic and social excesses and adapt 
educational programs to the qualifications required in the future. They 
must also ensure that workers potentially penalized by layoffs are 
compensated and that the new wealth thus generated can benefit society 
as a whole, and not just a handful of operators. This will not be an 
easy task because there is international competition between countries 
to monopolize the beneficial impacts of the new technologies.
Currently,
 the countries that are at the forefront of regulating Artificial 
Intelligence technologies and AI systems are the European Union, China, 
the United States and the United Kingdom. The EU has put forward a 
preliminary regulatory and digital strategy framework called the AI Act.
 The objective is to identify acceptable and unacceptable risks that 
will arise from the applications of new digital technologies. Likewise, 
in June 2022, the Canadian federal government introduced the Artificial Intelligence and Data Act
 (LIAD) as part of bill C-27, i.e. the Digital Charter Implementation 
Act of 2022. The purpose is to guide AI innovation in a positive 
direction and to encourage a responsible adoption of AI technologies by 
Canadians and Canadian businesses.
• Conclusions
Does
 the advent of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) revolution herald an 
extraordinarily promising breakthrough for humanity, or does it rather 
carry a risk of great confusion and civilizational regression?
Indeed,
 many questions come to mind: will humans master the various Artificial 
Intelligence systems so that they serve not only the private economic 
and industrial interests behind their applications, but also that of 
displaced workers and the common interest? Is it possible that these 
systems will become so pervasive and so powerful that they could end up 
becoming forces of control, dehumanization and enslavement for large 
numbers of people?
A first
 conclusion is that no one can definitely answer these questions with 
precision and with full knowledge of the facts. And if we ever do get 
the answers, it may be too late. Consequently, everything will depend on
 the uses that we make of this new technology.
The
 digital revolution of Artificial Intelligence therefore raises more 
questions than it gives answers, as it is a technology that is expected 
to evolve and find new applications, good or bad, over time.
A
 second conclusion is that countries and economies that fall behind in 
adopting the AI technology could experience economic difficulties in the
 years and decades to come. Even those economies in the forefront of the
 new industrial revolution could expect an increase in incomes and 
wealth disparities.
A 
third conclusion is that the innovation of intelligent robots driven by 
Artificial Intelligence certainly opens up a new field for gains in 
labor productivity through creative destruction, 
 in a certain number of professions and industries. However, it is 
rightly a cause for concern, as it could also facilitate cheating, 
falsification, confusion and dehumanization of human beings in many 
areas.
 Dr. Rodrigue Tremblay.
http://rodriguetremblay100.blogspot.com/2024/03/march-6-2024-digital-revolution-of.html