The Spoon 13 November 2019 |
In another likely scenario for the future, we won’t need a gig economy because the robots will do it all.
At least, they’ll be able to do an awful lot of peddling restaurant and grocery deliveries to customers’ apartments and houses. With delivery robots roving around college campuses, some cities, and now Russia, it’s possible — nay, inevitable — that delivery services will render the debate over human workers pointless by replacing said humans with these six-wheeled bots.
So too will autonomous vehicles. Amid far more controversial statements
this week, Uber’s CEO Dara Khosrowshahi’s said autonomous ride-hailing is probably five
to ten years off, and that there will be some autonomous driving going in just
three to five years for simple tasks and routes.
Writing about the
Uber news, my colleague Chris Albrecht points out that “food delivery
certainly seems like it could fit the bill when it comes to simple tasks and
routes” and that autonomous vehicles nix the cost of human drivers. But he
also rightly notes that “this displacement of human labor brings up its
own societal issues.” Which means robots and autonomous vehicles could
potentially resolve some of the fight around the gig economy, but they’ll open
up a fresh can of worms when it comes to the ethics of the food delivery model.
– Jenn
Subscribe to our free mailing list and always be the first to receive the latest news and updates.