Recent quotes:

Morning Must-Watch: Larry Summers and Friends: The Future of Work - Washington Center for Equitable Growth

http://www.c-span.org/video/?324436-1/discussion-future-work Larry Summers: On the diagnosis, I want to make a confession of ignorance, make an observation, and express a worry. First, my confession of ignorance is this, and I think it should apply to everybody who speaks confidently in this area

Evening Must-Read: The Hamilton Project: Future of Work Event: Tweets - Washington Center for Equitable Growth

The Hamilton Project (@hamiltonproj) | Twitter: You can watch the full #FutureOfWork forum on @cspan http://cs.pn/1z3WKBP That concludes our #FutureOfWork event.Thanks to our panelists for a great discussion. Visit http://bit.ly/1BZmC4U for video & audio Who is going to be technologically displaced if machines take away labor jobs? That’s a social problem, concludes @LauraDTyson #FutureOfWork ‘US has great incentives to do #research, but weak incentives to create #jobs and keep profits here’ – @LauraDTyson #labor #FutureOfWork Given nature of tech changes, a lot is not going to measurable unless you figure what the output is, @LauraDTyson asks panel #FutureOfWork

The Intellectual War Over the Rise of the Machines Continues...: Focus - Washington Center for Equitable Growth

I see that the vir illustris Lawrence Mishel, our neighbor here in the Great Center-Left Atrium Building at 1333 H St. N.W., has had his ire awakened by the femina clarissima Melissa Kearney and her forthcoming Hamilton Project event on robots tomorrow: http://www.hamiltonproject.org/papers/future_of_work_in_machine_age/… Lawrence Mishel: Failed Theory Posed by Wall Street Dems Puts Hillary Clinton in a Bind: “There was a time where it was plausible to argue that more education and innovation were the primary solutions to our economic problems. But that time has passed…. You cannot tell that, however, to the… Hamilton Project…. The new framing paper… details how ‘advancing computer power and automation technology’ creates a challenge for: how to educate more people for the jobs of the future, how to foster creation of high-paying jobs, and how to support those who struggle economically during the transition… the same analysis we heard from the Clinton administration 20 years ago, when the discussion was of a ‘transition to the new information economy.’ Let them eat education. The education-only solution wasn’t appropriate when it was first put forward, and it is not even remotely plausible now….