
Uber Eats and Starship Technologies have partnered to launch automated food deliveries in the UK. Rolling out in Leeds as of December 2025, robots will deliver takeaways and groceries. The automation company, Starship Technologies, touts that the deliveries “work profitably at city scale”. There’s no doubt about that. When labour is removed from the equation, the only costs are maintenance and energy. All of a sudden, capital has become labour — there are no potential unions or people in the way of a profit and jobs are being lost.
Is automated delivery progress?
Now, that actually could be progress. No longer are people having to take up their time cycling or driving around cities to convenience those with more disposable income. But it’s only a move forward if progressives step up and say: you’ve removed labour costs from your operation, so we want profit removed too. As such, a progressive administration should bring automated convenience services into public ownership through mandating government bonds to the companies at the market rate.
This is what Clement Attlee’s post-war 1945 government did in order to nationalise 20% of the economy. They didn’t want to seize private property and crash the markets. Rather, they used the democratic mandate from their manifesto in order to mandate prices for ‘assets’ they wanted to nationalise. Then, after a one-off payment to private companies, the government and the public received gains every year.
Younger generations take such convenience as a given and it’s a no-brainer for the government to invest here, especially as the service becomes automated. Removing the middleman between businesses and people would stop delivery services milking profits from both the restaurant and the customer.
Anything that centralises businesses in one place, providing convenience to people, should be considered digital infrastructure and owned publicly.
Fourth industrial revolution
In the years to come, all production and services will be automated. This will leave so many people without a job that a new system must emerge based on collective ownership of robots or some form of citizens’ dividend.
The thing is, China is miles ahead in the move towards the fourth industrial revolution through an active state that publicly invests, taking stakes in strategic high tech companies.
While the technology is increasingly there, it’s actually ideology that’s lagging behind. People may struggle to conceive of an automated system of luxury and are stuck in their ways.
Featured image via TechXplore
By James Wright
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