Truean's Idle Musings: I wonder if it is actually possible to have a new American Business compete anymore. Also labor automation and commerce feedback loops and the unseen consequences thereof. Finally, furniture is something DF is all about.
You know, the more I think about it, the more I realize we need something that people can do that covers the total costs of the activity without a large amount of education. We're talking capital, interest, labor cost, the works. I'm really starting to wonder what that would be. The current business analysis seems to leave out any sort of "sustaining your customer base" analysis in favor of "can it be done cheaper." This of course leaves the very real question of what people are supposed to do with themselves (read: the unemployed, or really just anyone).
I wonder if that would really work. Let's take dining chairs for a moment, keeping in mind that this is really rough/I don't see anybody else doing it....
http://www.walmart.com/search/search-ng.do?search_query=chair+dining&ic=16_0&Find=Find&search_constraint=0 It appears you aren't gonna get a chair for under $40.00 at Wal-Mart. Clearly I mean like a dining room chair or something like that, a wooden one. Many of them go for an average of $50 or $60 depending upon the model. There must be a market for these things, because Wal-Mart has been selling them for years.
Hell, the dinette sets aren't even really cheap....I wonder how many chairs a person could make in an 8 hour day. This would be complicated by cost of applicable machines and tools, as well as materials (lumber), and presumably space to do the work/store stuff. Let's go with four chairs a day with each chair taking about 2 hours to make. Assuming you sell all four chairs for $40, that's what? $160/worker per day in productivity
If each one is paid.... I dunno. $100/day? ($12.5/hour) It's a nice round number. That'd be about $110/day after payroll taxes for the company cost. It would really come down to
material and equipment costs as well as other overhead. You're talking about a fairly tight margin of $50/day/worker to cover that. Then of course that assumes you actually sell the damn things. Things would be much easier with 5 chairs per worker per day with a margin of $90, if possible. Clearly, this doesn't even consider things like tables and/or other furniture pieces/related goods/various styles. We're not even touching delivery or the fact that they're already put together.
I guess even if you could produce the damn things, you'd have to somehow create a market for them modeled after some kind of demand curve. I dunno what would make people chose to buy them because I somehow don't know if it would be a priority purchase right now.
It should be fairly obvious that "Chairs" can be substituted for nearly any product or service in theory and that's the point. It'd be a wonderful thing to find something productive for people do do that's a labor intensive industry, but damn that just seems rather difficult currently.
A part of me really truly hates machines and robots because they cost the company and the economy an immense amount of money by breaking the commerce cycle: they don't buy things like workers do. They aren't "Smart" they are short sighted. Using automated machines takes a consumer out of the loop. I'd rather have an operation where 50 people make 200 chairs/day than a robot making 1000/day, because now as a society, we've got 50 people who have no livelihood and who can't afford to buy things from other businesses/companies. This creates a negative feedback loop that damages the economy and it cost several businesses 50 customers, which could and does break those other businesses.
I dunno, I just find this amazing in a certain light that it's impossible for craft shops like this to be a reality anymore, especially if you could have them made to order from real wood (not that cheap shit they sell now). Feh, I'm just frustrated by this whole "we have crazy high unemployment" thing and my mind always defaults into problem solving mode. I just can't comprehend that there is literally NOTHING we could be having all these unemployed people do for work/jobs. Though that unfortunately seems to be the case.