I stayed indoors all day long. When I went at around 5.30 in the evening to buy some chicken meat, everybody was hurrying and stores started pulling down their shutters. Curfew started from 6 in the evening. To make matters worse, it was also raining. When I returned home I did so in a power walk mode!
Imphal sure looked a ghost town in 6 in the evening.
So, I was completely shut out from the happening around me. But I dare that in this rain soaked evening even the dreaded killers would not have venture out to shoot down some poor migrant workers!
Even in this bleak atmosphere I still want to try to answer the question with which I ended my last post. Please re-read the post.
1) We need a political barrier. We should not be isolationist but we need some norms for letting in people from other parts of the world. That norm should be tailored to our needs and interests. We should be able to enforce that norm by coercion.
2) We should heavily lean on the emerging technology. If 21st Century belongs to the 4th World people, then it is also the century of robots. We should try to make the line of the emerging robots intersect with that of the tiny societies like us. Even in the US, which is a huge country, they are field testing apple-picking robots. Essentially, they are attempting to give serious competitions to the cheap migrant workers mainly from Mexico. And, the development cost of that particular robot, which the engineers think would be as good as humans in picking apples in the field, is around 5 million US dollars. That cost is certainly affordable. We need to compete out the cheap labor of the migrant workers.
3) We need to leverage our small size. That we are so small in number should mean that we are nimble—we should be quicker to arrive at collective decision and more ready to bear social cost imposed on us by the smallness of our population. For example, if the robots doing works in the field are not as versatile as the migrant workers, we should ready to live with it until new generation robots comes out in the market.
Monday, March 24, 2008
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