Syllabus: Prof. Dr. Iur Jens Lowitzsch
Syllabus: Prof. Dr. Iur Jens Lowitzsch
Syllabus: Prof. Dr. Iur Jens Lowitzsch
Syllabus
Automation, digital revolution and capital concentration: A race for the machine?
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Course description:
In an age of globalization and technological progress the acceleration of digital information and communication
technologies (ICT) has led and continues to lead to social changes which shake the foundations of the world of
work, dubbed industrial revolution 4.0. This process mainly characterised by automation, robotics and artificial
intelligence impacts not only national law and economic systems but also traditional institutions of social existence and such the foundations of our modern societies as such, in Europe as well as across the world.
This course investigates the preconditions leading to and the results arising from this process of change in modern societies with a focus on distributive effects. In the light of the current discussion on growing income and
asset disparity the shift away from labour to capital that accompanies automation is inclined to exacerbate inequalities putting into question distributive justice and increasing the danger of new social and cultural conflicts.
The seminar has three parts; the first one examines the new (b)orders within Social Europe with regards to the
functions of property and to distributive justice focussing on inequality and the distribution of property ownership.
The focus is on labour's declining income share and the role of capital accumulation and capital-augmenting
technical change.
The second part looks upon the question of how the digital revolution impacts on the shift between labour and
capital as income factors. Issues of micro and macro distributional effects for different groups of society and the
impact on wealth concentration are investigated.
The third part explores to what extend a wider distribution of ownership of productive property, namely of robots
and machines, can mitigate negative effects of digitalisation? It focuses on alternative economic models, namely
the question to what extend an economic policy based on the broadening of productive property could serve as
a counter model to the current mainstream.
Literature:
Bassanini. Andrea/ Manfredi, Thomas Capital's Grabbing Hand? A Cross-Country/Cross-Industry Analysis of the Decline
of the Labour Share (2012), OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers, No. 133.
Belke, Ansgar / Dreger, Christian / Ochmann, Richard Do wealthier households save more?, DIW discussion paper,
2012.
Brynjolfsson, Erik / McAfee, Andrew Race against the machine Digital Frontier Press, 2011.
Economist, Outsourcing and offshoring, Economist Special report, January 2013.
Freeman, Richard Who owns the robots rules the world, IZA World of Labor 2015: 5.
Frey, Benedikt / Osborne, Michael The Future of Employment: How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerisation?,
September 2013.
Hellebrandt, Thomas et al., Income Inequality Developments in the Great Recession, DIW SOEP paper 644, 2014;
Kelso, Louis O./Hetter, Patricia, Uprooting World Poverty: A job for business, Business Horizons, Fall, 1964.
Lanchester, John, The Robots Are Coming, London Review of Books Vol. 37 No. 5 of 5 March 2015.
Lowitzsch, Jens Automation, digital revolution and capital concentration The elephant in the room: A race for the
machine? EP public hearing EFP in the age of digitalisation, EMPL-Com. 2016
Rotman, David, Who Will Own the Robots MIT Review June 16, 2015;
Rotman, David, How Technology Is Destroying Jobs, MIT Review of June 12, 2013.