Super Cities №176 — Human Robots (in One Chart)

Capital
Capital
Published in
2 min readFeb 24, 2019

One Big Thing

Hart’s Comment

This chart highlights the central economic, political, and societal challenge in America. On a human level, this chart and what it represents is tearing at our country’s seams.

From 1948–1973, Ms. Worker’s received pay commensurate with what she produced.

Channeling Richard Feynman, you could easily explain to a child Ms. Worker’s experience from 1948–1973: she was fairly paid.

Since 1973, though, Ms. Worker’s productivity has increased by three-fourths, but her pay has increased by less than ten percent.

A child would call Ms. Worker’s situation unfair.

Because it is (and yes, I understand globalization, productivity, and markets).

As software and artificial intelligence consume cities, Ms. Worker deserves better than to be treated as a work-but-don’t-reward robot.

If not, she and her 100 million friends will have some harsh things to say to their unfair overlords.

Pay It Forward

Be a pal

Forward this email or the Super Cities sign-up link to your friends

Want More?

You can read all the issues of Super Cities on Medium

Let’s start a conversation. Hit reply or ping me @hartcoin

Super Cities — Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite platform

Capital — Twitter

Capital — Medium

--

--

Capital
Capital

We build products and companies that move cities forward #SuperCities