Arriving Today Quotes

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Arriving Today Quotes
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“In America and in rich countries the world over, for many workers, the warehouse is the new factory.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“At some point in their journey, 90 percent of the world’s goods travel by ship.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“What Keynes got wrong is what lots of people get wrong about the relationship between new technologies, increased productivity, and jobs. New technologies don't eliminate jobs. As living standards rise, humans find new ways to consume more. Just as important, every time we automate a task, we tend to use more of that product or service, in combination with others, to accomplish some other more complicated or difficult end.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“As one economist who worked with actual Uber data discovered, the wage that workers in such fluid, two-sided markets for unskilled labor inevitably garner is whatever the local minimum wage happens to be.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“Taylorism underwent rapid evolution as people all over the world applied its basic notions of how to increase efficiency through a combination of pushing workers harder and identifying the best way for each to do their job.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“it costs about two dollars to ship a TV from China to the United States, port to port.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“From 1993 to 2016, the proportion of Vietnamese who lived in poverty dropped from 51 percent to 10 percent.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“this water is the reason Vietnam has always been so productive agriculturally. While it sometimes gets in the way, it’s also one reason the country is now booming economically. From 1993 to 2016, the proportion of Vietnamese who lived in poverty dropped from 51 percent to 10 percent”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“One of the ironies of Bezosism is that it’s not the jobs of blue-collar workers that are disappearing, but the jobs of middle managers.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“The original idea, favored by Jack Welch, former CEO of GE, was that every company should aim for a certain level of turnover, whatever the consequences. The system was rife with perverse incentives. Peers who sabotaged others’ work could save their own jobs; managers might hire less-capable people on their teams to keep from having to fire existing employees whom they favored. Despite the system’s drawbacks, Welch’s influence was so far-reaching that stack ranking was adopted at many of today’s tech giants, where it wreaked havoc on morale and productivity for decades. Eventually, its negative effects became well known enough to make the practice a liability at companies chasing workers whose specialized talents made them scarce, such as engineers. In the mid-2010s, companies including Google, Microsoft, and Amazon abandoned it.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“In addition, many companies are realizing that in an age of pandemics, robots have a unique advantage—they don’t get sick.”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
“(This is one reason shipping container architecture, far from being some kind of Earth-friendly “recycling,” is in many cases an absurd vanity: stripping away all that nasty stuff takes more time, money, and energy than building a comparable structure anew.)”
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy
― Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door -- Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy