We need to restate productivity, real salaries, unemployment and GDP, to account for the many “working hours” spent consuming distractions.
In Bank of England’s “bankunderground" blog we recently read: “With the rise of smartphones in particular, the amount of stimuli competing for our attention throughout the day has exploded... we are more distracted than ever as a result of the battle for our attention. One study, for example, finds that we are distracted nearly 50% of the time.”
And on a recent visit to a major shop in the Washington area, thinking about it, I noticed that 8 out of the 11 attendants I saw were busy with some type of activity on their cellphones, and I seriously suspect they were not just checking inventories.
The impact of that on productivity, with less effective working time is being put into production, could be huge.
Also, going from for instance a 10% to a 50% distraction signifies de facto that full time or paid by the hour employee’s real salaries have increased fabulously.
And what about the real employment rate if we deduct the hours engaged in distractions? A statistical nightmare? Will we ever be able to compare apples with apples again?
And how should all these working hours consumed with distractions be considered in the GDP figures?
It behooves us to make certain how we measure the economy gets updated to reflect underlying realities.
Perhaps then we are able to understand better the growing need for worthy and decent unemployments.
Perhaps then we are able to better understand the need for a Universal Basic Income, not as to allow some to stay in bed, but to allow everyone a better opportunity to reach up to whatever gainful employments might be left, like those “low-wage jobs” that it behooves us all, not to consider as “low value jobs”
PS. When you buy a web driven distraction you usually pay one amount… but your consumption of the distractions could be one hour per month or 300 hours per month, a difference that seems not to be considered anywhere.
@PerKurowski