Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Companies Investing in Robots, Automation Is Good News for Employees, Economy
by Angela
November 14, 2021


LONG READ

Even as the health side of the pandemic slowly improves, the US economy remains in a strange place

Labor markets are tight, and a record percentage of respondents in a monthly Gallup poll of Americans said this was a good time to find a quality job. But despite the strong job market, the public is overall not satisfied with the state of the economy. In the same Gallup poll, most respondents said the economy was “only fair” or “poor.”

But lurking under the challenging transitions are encouraging signs that America’s economic outlook may get better once the pandemic is fully in the rearview mirror and supply chains are no longer strained. One such sign is the fact that businesses are using what they learned from the COVID-19 era to become more efficient and get better at doing more with less.

Perhaps one of the most visible examples of businesses learning from the pandemic is in how we eat out. When you sit down at the table, you may be asked to scan a QR code and pull it up on your phone instead of being handed a paper menu. Once you pull up the menu, it’s shortened and streamlined. And once you’ve finished up your meal, another QR code may allow you to pay your check online, without having to flag down a server or wait for a paper receipt.

These changes are not just about reducing the risk of virus spread — but also about boosting productivity. Servers who don’t have to come to your table as many times per meal can serve more tables. Nobody needs to print, distribute, retrieve, or clean menus. A trimmed-down menu doesn’t require stocking as many ingredients, and the items can be made with fewer kitchen staffers.

Even fast-food restaurants, whose business models are already designed to be more labor-light than full-service restaurants, are taking advantage of the pandemic to accelerate the shift toward online ordering and push customers to take out instead of eating in, which reduces the need for staff to take orders and clean tables.

These changes all make restaurants more efficient — allowing them to take in more customers and, in turn, make more money. And if customers find them acceptable, that means they’re likely to stick around well after the pandemic is over. And it’s not just restaurants that are going full speed ahead with changes to their business operations. Airlines are leaning into booking and rebooking through their apps to reduce the need for staffed call centers, medical practices are embracing telehealth visits for patients, retail outlets are pushing customers toward more efficient online ordering, and many industries are allowing more workers to work permanently from home.

Businesses have been punched in the mouth by the pandemic — health restrictions, a tight job market, a supply-chain crunch — and are responding by jumping into the future.

These new technologies and more efficient operations don’t mean companies reap only bigger profits, and they certainly don’t mean that workers are going to get screwed over by robots taking their jobs. These changes hold the key to a faster-growing US economy and higher paychecks for Americans — if we can make sure the gains are divided evenly.

The benefits of forced experimentation

While the pandemic is an extreme case of adapting to sudden changes, it’s not the only time that workers and businesses have been forced to reinvent their habits.

In 2014, a subway strike in London forced large numbers of commuters to find alternative routes to work. For most workers, this was simply a pain, and when the London Underground returned to normal operations, they returned to their normal commuting patterns. But in a 2017 paper, the economists Shaun Larcom, Ferdinand Rauch, and Tim Willems found that 5% of strike-disrupted commuters permanently adopted a new way of getting to work.

Why? Well, it appeared they’d never thought very hard about whether there was a better way to get to work, and they found one only when they were forced to look for it.

The pandemic had a similarly disruptive effect on our lives. Most pandemic-driven disruptions are bad for the economy, and when we can go back to normal, we will. But sometimes, we’ve found — businesses have found, workers have found — the new way of doing business is better than the old way. That’s a silver lining, a benefit we get to keep even after the pandemic is over.

Sometimes, as is the case with the mRNA vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna, we are getting the benefit of accelerated investment in a useful technology. Sometimes, it’s because businesses have been pushed to streamline how they operate — either to cope with the pandemic itself or with the difficulty of hiring workers as we’ve come out of the pandemic.

And sometimes, it’s because customers have been forced into flexibility: People have been forced to adapt to new systems that they otherwise would have found too onerous or confusing. Phone-ordering technology in restaurants isn’t new, but customers are increasingly resigned to the idea that they have to learn new technologies and download new apps to order. So firms have more latitude to ask customers to be partners in trying new things, even things that customers may have found annoying or arduous in the past.

Personally, I had never used a QR code before the pandemic. Now, like everyone else, I need to use them frequently. This forced adaptation makes it easier for businesses to roll out labor-saving processes that rely on a customer to know how to use such a code.
Learned efficiency

In August, sales at restaurants and bars in the US were 8.8% higher than they were in January 2020, before the start of the pandemic, up to $72 billion a month from $66 billion on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the US Census Bureau. Yet the number of employees working at these businesses was 7.2% lower, a drop from 12.2 million to 11.4 million, also seasonally adjusted, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In other words, restaurants and bars are bringing in a lot more money than they were before the pandemic, even with fewer workers — in fact, they are getting about 17% more sales per worker than they did before this mess started. (And apparently not because they’re adding more hours to their existing workers’ schedules — the average worker in leisure and hospitality was working only 1% longer a week, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.)

Now, a significant chunk of that increase in sales is because restaurants and bars are charging customers more. Prices at these sorts of places in August were up more than 7% from January 2020. But even when you strip out the price hike, labor productivity — the formal term for getting more output per hour worked by an employee — still gained about 10% in less than a year. Isn’t that remarkable?


Restaurants have adopted new technology — like paperless menus and online bill pay — to make workers more productive and service more efficient.

It’s all the more impressive because some COVID-19-driven changes were harmful for productivity. Spacing tables out farther, installing plexiglass barriers, and having to clean surfaces more often all ate up more man hours without adding to sales — therefore causing productivity to decline.

Admittedly, some of these changes, such as the elimination of printed menus, are already starting to go away as businesses move off a pandemic footing. Even though going back to the old ways may be more work, some of these changes may be annoying for customers — sometimes, you simply want to be handed a menu instead of having to pull out your phone and click through three screens to see which drinks are available.

But some of these changes are here to stay, which means a permanent change in the relationship of the restaurant business and its employees — one that should mean permanently higher productivity, lower prices for consumers, and, if the job market remains strong, higher hourly wages for workers.

Higher productivity benefits workers and consumers when the overall economy is strong

Higher productivity makes it possible for businesses to raise wages. If a business is making more money because of a new technology or a streamlined service, it’s more likely to do what it takes to keep the lights on and bring in the increased revenue. If that means boosting employees’ pay a bit so things keep running smoothly, so be it. For similar reasons, productivity gains also make it possible for businesses to sell products at lower prices or improve products without raising the price.

But how the gains from increased productivity are divided — among workers, customers, and owners — depends on the broader economy.

The distribution tends to be according to who has power in the market: If labor is scarce, wages will have to rise to incentivize people to take jobs; if consumers have many options, there is pressure to keep prices low to bring people in; if people are wary of investing in businesses, investors can demand businesses keep the money for themselves in the form of higher profits.

Currently, employees have the bulk of the power. The labor market is tight — firms are trying to keep up with the sudden spike in customers and fill jobs, but with fewer available workers, businesses are having to pay up to recruit employees. This means the gains from productivity are more likely to be passed down to workers.


CUSTOMERS ARE WORKERS AFTER WORK

Customers, meanwhile, are feeling the pinch of rising inflation. As people spend their pent-up savings from the pandemic, businesses are struggling to keep up and raising their prices to make the profits they need (though customers tend to also be workers, so they’re likely to come out ahead on net). If businesses were not finding ways to raise productivity, they’d have to charge customers even more.

If the job market stays hot, workers can demand larger paychecks and come out on top even as companies invest in new productivity-enhancing systems.

A cooler overall economy would reduce the benefits to workers and give companies less incentive to innovate and raise productivity. We saw this when the labor market was weaker. Employees did not have the flexibility to simply walk away and find another job. Businesses could instead hire another person on the cheap or overwork staff instead of investing in boosted productivity or sharing any gains with their employees.

1933


Whether the increased revenue from these productivity gains keeps making it to employees or businesses go back to simply pocketing the income will come down to how the economy is managed — particularly by the 
Federal Reserve


As it stands, the Fed has kept interest rates low and instituted a series of programs that have allowed the economy to heat up and the labor market to stay tight — helping workers reap the gains from the productivity boost. But how long the central bank can sustain its pro-worker stance and allow employees to reap these gains comes down to another question: Just how well can the Fed manage inflation?

The monetary conditions — most importantly, low interest rates — that foster higher wages can also push up prices, and the Fed’s support is one of the factors that has pushed inflation above the central bank’s long-run goal of 2%. Ideally, the further relaxation of pandemic-related restrictions and the easing of the supply-chain disruptions should help inflation cool off, but there are also worries that the price hikes could lead the Fed to increase interest rates and diminish workers’ power.

A key question is whether these factors that push down inflation will come fast enough for the Fed to wait for them.
How much could pandemic innovation boost productivity?

The pandemic-driven productivity boost is a win for not only labor but also the US economy overall. Before the pandemic, productivity growth had been disappointing for decades, with new technologies failing to produce substantial gains. While the early signs are that this time may be different, economists are wary to declare the issue solved.

Productivity growth was robust in the first two quarters of this year: over 4% in the first quarter and more than 2% in the second quarter, which easily outpaced the 1.2% average for the decade after the global financial crisis, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics figures. (In the summer, Heather Long wrote a useful story for The Washington Post about what this could signal for longer-run productivity gains.) But then the third quarter was terrible, with labor productivity falling 5% amid the Delta wave.

Productivity often goes up in times of economic distress because more junior workers and workers in lower-productivity industries are more likely to lose their jobs, which leaves behind a workforce that is smaller but more productive on a per-worker basis. Sometimes, as the labor market returns to normal, those lower-productivity employees are rehired, and productivity growth recedes.

As customers get used to new ways of doing business — such as ordering online and picking up in quick “to-go” lines — productivity gains could stick around even as the economy gets back to “normal.”

El Pollo Loco

Still, this time, analysts at McKinsey and Goldman Sachs are expecting a boost in productivity gains to stick around.

Goldman forecast “a 4% boost of productivity levels relative to trend” — that is, added US productivity growth of 1.3% a year from 2020 to 2022, which would set a permanently higher baseline that allows the economy to grow even faster. It attributed these gains to three broad categories: shifts toward more efficient online retail and e-commerce, efficiencies from businesses cutting down on in-person work, and inefficient businesses going bust and new, more efficient competitors taking their places.

McKinsey’s forecast is similar, adding 1% to productivity growth in the US and six large European countries each year through 2024. It cited the same factors as Goldman, as well as automation, telemedicine, and artificial intelligence.

While the question of whether faster productivity growth sticks around is an open one, there has been something about the past two years — and the quickly changing approaches to work and technology we experienced — that has been clarifying.
Thank God the robots are taking our jobs

For a couple decades now, there’s been a reductive conversation about automation and the job market, as though machines are going to put people out of work and leave them penniless. This was the premise of Andrew Yang’s campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination: The government would need to send people monthly checks because robots were coming to take your job and make it increasingly impossible to make a living by working.

But what you can see in the economy right now — with the combination of strong wage growth, a large number of job openings, rising productivity, and shifts toward automation — is that machines and workers are not just substitutes but also complements.

When machines replace human workers, they make the economy more productive and efficient. Businesses produce more income that can then be paid to employees, who go on to spend their higher paychecks on other products and services, which will be produced by a combination of machines and human workers. Jobs are lost but jobs are also created — and those new jobs are, on average, more productive and support higher wages.

This requires the right mix of policy from the Fed and others to ensure that the gains are simply captured by investors in the form of higher profits, but if things line up with the current economy — with power in the hands of employees and businesses passing along the gains — the productivity boom could be a huge boost for American workers and the economy as a whole.

When restaurant orders are taken by computer, that means serving each customer is less work and each worker can do more service, which makes higher pay possible. When employees work from home two days a week, that’s less demand for transportation services, but it also means fewer hours spent commuting and more time available for some combination of work and leisure. When you can change your airline reservation in the app, that reduces the labor cost to sell an airplane ticket and makes lower prices possible, which means consumers have more money left over to buy other products and services.

These are all positive changes. And my hope is that, as we continue to emerge from the pandemic, and as we continue to shed our labor-intensive business practices, we retain our greater openness to new, better, and more efficient ways of doing business — such as the widespread adoption of autonomous vehicles — recognizing that these changes can benefit all of us, when we are willing to adjust and learn.

  • https://medium.com/@MichaelMcBride/did-karl-marx-predict-artificial...

    2017-11-18 · However, in the great battle of Man vs. MachineMarx shockingly sides with… the machine. He makes a profound prediction on the future of automation, and one that it would be useful for us to ...

    • Estimated Reading Time: 8 mins
  • Marx and the Machine – non.copyriot.com

    https://non.copyriot.com/marx-and-the-machine

    2019-09-17 · Marx and the Machine. With the reference to the phylogeny of machines, which ranges from complex tools to machines driven by motors to automatons, Marx always combines a genealogy of technology shaped by capital and thus clearly sets himself apart from a transhistorical theory of the evolution of technology. Marx writes: „Work is organized ...

  • Marx and the Machine - ZoLAist's Diary

    zolaist.org/wiki/images/a/a8/Marx_and_the_Machine.pdf · PDF file

    Marx and the Machine. As an aside in a discussion of the status of the concepts of economics, Karl Marx wrote: "The handmill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill, society with the industrial capitalist. 


  • Whilst the development and application of machinery within the productive process was a revolutionary step forward, Marx begins Chapter 15 of Capital on “Machinery and Large-Scale Industry” by explicitly stating the purpose of the application of such machinery on a capitalist basis: to increase the profits of the capitalists.

    www.socialist.net/marx-s-capital-chapters-15-the-machine.htm



                                                             
    TOYS FOR BOYS
    Robots, big data as Gulf nations bet on AI
    Wednesday, 17 Nov 2021


    Visitors walk past a robot outside the Dutch pavilion at the Expo 2020, in Dubai, a sign of things to come for the Gulf, where new cities are being built from scratch with AI at their core. — AFP

    Robots puttering around Dubai's hi-tech Expo site could be a sign of things to come for the Gulf, where new cities are being built from scratch with artificial intelligence at their core.

    The 5G-enabled Expo, covering an area twice the size of Monaco, will remain as a "city of the future" and tech industry hub, Expo's chief told AFP before its grand opening last month.

    But the US$7bil (RM29.21bil) project, featuring robots that greet visitors and can be used to order food, is not alone in the wealthy Gulf, where petro-dollars are being invested heavily in a post-oil future.

    Neighbouring Saudi Arabia is lavishing US$500bil (RM2.08tril) on NEOM, a brand new, next-generation Red Sea tech centre that will offer ultra-connectivity to its planned population of one million-plus, and is trialling airborne taxis.

    AI is also at the heart of other Saudi developments including the Red Sea Project, a new tourist area that will use smart systems to monitor environmental impacts and visitor movements.

    Analysts say the Gulf monarchies are willing to bet big on AI, knowing they must move away from their reliance on fossil fuel industries and become more active in tech, tourism and other areas.

    "You've got very forward (-looking), somewhat risk-loving leadership that sees the need to transform," said Kaveh Vessali, a partner at consultancy firm PwC Middle East.

    "I think that's just completely the opposite of what I see in the rest of the world."



    Automated transport

    Artificial intelligence courses in Bahrain primary schools, the UAE's plans for automated delivery drones and Dubai's ambition to have 25% of all transport automated by 2030 offer further evidence of the Gulf's tech aspirations.

    The Middle East is predicted to receive only 2% of the estimated US$15.7tril (RM65.52tril) global AI economy by 2030, according to PwC.

    But analysts say the Gulf countries – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE – are playing the long game, positioning themselves to leapfrog global players.

    The annual growth rate of the Middle East AI market is about 20-34%, led by the UAE and then Saudi Arabia, PwC said in a report, predicting that more than 10% of each of the two countries' GDP will come from AI by 2030.

    "Governments have the luxury of being more strategic," said Vessali, citing the 20 and 50-year plans which are a hallmark of Gulf governments.

    "This is unheard of a) in the private sector, and b) in the West," he adds.

    Vessali said most AI companies in Gulf states are fully, or at least semi, governmental, with comparatively low pressure to generate short-term returns.

    However, the region has a history of investing in companies which did not become particularly profitable, outside a few core industries such as oil and gas, he warned.



    'Streamlined' decision-making


    While the region might be known as culturally conservative, its AI strategies are better characterised as liberal and aggressive, according to some local players.

    In 2017, the UAE appointed its first minister of state for artificial intelligence, Omar bin Sultan al-Olama, to spearhead the country's AI strategy, launched that same year.

    The UAE has said it aims to become one of the leading nations in AI by 2031, creating new economic and business opportunities, and generate up to 335 billion dirhams ($91 billion) in extra growth.

    "The region seems to classify being left behind on new technologies as a bigger risk than anything else," said Cesar Lopez, the CEO of Datumcon.

    "Taking the risk to do what others aren't has attracted and built business," he told AFP.

    The data and AI solutions company based in the UAE and Saudi Arabia is using computer vision to scan and identify damaged containers at Jebel Ali port in Dubai, one of the world's busiest, operated by logistics company DP World.



    But despite the Gulf's AI investments, the lack of reliable and accessible data sets, which are at the core of these systems, remain a barrier.

    "It's going to take a few years to get there because the data isn't mature enough for it yet (in the region)," said Stephen Rawson, an associate at American consulting firm Oliver Wyman.

    While Gulf countries have been better at centralising data across different governmental platforms, other leading countries have managed better data sets for longer.

    But being newer to data collection has its advantages, said Rawson, as Gulf countries can generate cleaner data to create more streamlined AI systems.

    "They are empowered to do this more than they would be in the West," said Rawson, because with private enterprises, "getting them to work and play nice will only work if there's a profit margin incentive for all of them." 

    – AFP

    Northern American businesses are ordering robots to meet consumer demands amid a labour shortage in the country. But are robots coming after the jobs of humans? Palki Sharma tells you more.
    VIDEO


    The labor crunch is helping to feed the 

    rise of the robots: Morning Brief

    ·Editor focused on markets and the economy

    Tuesday, November 16, 2021

    How ‘I quit' is leading to 'I, Robot'

    Last week, two separate but related labor market themes caught my attention.

    After Thursday’s news that employees walking off the job hit yet another record in September, a report from Reuters showed that North American companies added a record number of robots this year to bolster assembly lines, in a bid to alleviate the well-chronicled labor crunch (a hat tip on this article goes to economic commentator James Pethokoukis, who runs one of my favorite reads on the global economy).

    Citing data from the Association for Advancing Automation, Reuters pointed out that industrial firms rang up nearly $1.5 billion worth of robots (29,000 to be exact) — a whopping 37% more than the comparable period in 2020. Separately, Google Cloud research in June showed that two-thirds of manufacturers using artificial intelligence (AI) are relying more heavily on it.

    The Morning Brief has ruminated about the impact of the labor shortage and its close blood relative, the Great Resignation. Connecting the seemingly disparate threads, it poses a burning question: Are workers reluctant to fill open jobs — or stay put in them, for that matter — sowing the seeds of humanity’s eventual demise in the labor force?

    However irrational, the theme that human workers should fear the dawn of our robot overlords is hardly a novel one. Yet like everything else in the pandemic-era, the fallout from COVID-19 has poured accelerant on an already raging fire. With conditions worsening, we cannot help but wonder if workers are hastening the rise of automation in a way that displaces human labor — but in a more permanent way?

    Earlier this year, Yahoo Finance’s Dani Romero reported how stressed out restaurants, which have raised pay to little avail, are leaning on technology to meet heavy demand, and fill the gaps left by a shortage of employees.

    By all indications, it’s becoming increasingly apparent that the worker shortage is hastening the rise of robotics and advanced technology to address demand that has mostly defied a slowing economy and the dramatic supply crunch.

    In an appearance on Yahoo Finance Live last week, Brooklyn Dumpling Shop founder Stratis Morfogen waxed eloquent about his establishment’s use of self-ordering kiosks, powered by a smartphone app that lets the consumer grab and go in a creation he calls the “Automat.”

    The centerpiece of the Automat is a contraption Morfogen described to The New Yorker as “The Monster.” The founder likened it to the conveyor belt that once bedeviled Lucille Ball in a classic episode of “I Love Lucy.”

    For those who haven’t read, The Monster is a machine that can crank out tens of thousands of gourmet dumplings... in an HOUR. Chances are the machine won’t demand time off, ask for a raise — or be reluctant about getting vaccinated.

    In fact, Morfogen is expanding the format to drive thrus, where tricked-out order technology will allow clients to “come in and out of our drive-thru [while] having zero communication with our staff. It’ll all be remote control, phone operated and with QR codes,” Morfogen told Yahoo Finance.

    “COVID exposed a lot of [the restaurant industry]... we didn’t even have an online platform for ordering, we didn’t even have a social media presence, and I think hospitality learned their lesson, we have to embrace technology to make a model here,” the entrepreneur said.

    “If we can get our payroll down to 15-20% instead of the industry normal of 32%, we’re not just saving one restaurant... we’re really changing the game on the industry for making it a more efficient model,” Morfogen added.

    Along with previously stagnant wages, the idea that robots are coming for all of our jobs has been a major labor market theme for at least a decade — and is at least one reason behind why people found that viral video of a Boston Dynamics robot so frightening.

    None of this obviates the need to pay workers fair wages, or treat them better. And there’s only so much a robot can do, given that there’s simply no equivalent for uniquely human qualities like empathy and situational judgment.

    However, the longer workers quit, hold out, or put upward pressure on wages in ways that aren’t sustainable, the more we can expect employer desperation to grow in the face of resilient demand. And the more we can expect to see unsettling headlines about how the robot revolution — think Amazon’s recently-announced Alexa-powered automaton, Astro — is upon us.

    You heard it here first.

    By Javier E. David, editor at Yahoo Finance. Follow him at @Teflongeek

  • https://medium.com/@MichaelMcBride/did-karl-marx-predict-artificial...

    2017-11-18 · However, in the great battle of Man vs. MachineMarx shockingly sides with… the machine. He makes a profound prediction on the future of automation, and one that it would be useful for us to ...

    • Estimated Reading Time: 8 mins
  • Marx and the Machine – non.copyriot.com

    https://non.copyriot.com/marx-and-the-machine

    2019-09-17 · Marx and the Machine. With the reference to the phylogeny of machines, which ranges from complex tools to machines driven by motors to automatons, Marx always combines a genealogy of technology shaped by capital and thus clearly sets himself apart from a transhistorical theory of the evolution of technology. Marx writes: „Work is organized ...

  • Marx and the Machine - ZoLAist's Diary

    zolaist.org/wiki/images/a/a8/Marx_and_the_Machine.pdf · PDF file

    Marx and the Machine. As an aside in a discussion of the status of the concepts of economics, Karl Marx wrote: "The handmill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill, society with the industrial capitalist. 



  • Chile's Senate declines to impeach president over business deal revealed in Pandora Papers


    Issued on: 17/11/2021 - 

    Chilean President Sebastian Pinera will not face impeachment after opponents failed to rally enough votes in the Senate
    MARTIN BERNETTI AFP/File

    Santiago (AFP) – Chile's Senate declined Tuesday to impeach President Sebastian Pinera over a business deal revealed in the Pandora Papers leaks, refusing to go along with the lower chamber of Congress in opening proceedings against him.

    The vote was 24 in favor of impeachment, 18 against and one abstention. Those voting to charge the billionaire president with corruption needed at least 29 votes to pass the measure.

    "The defense has forcefully disproven each one of the facts that are presented as causes of this impeachment," Senator Francisco Chahuan, from Pinera's center-right National Renewal party.

    This means the case is closed, with no punishment of Pinera over the controversial sale of a mining company in 2010 when he was serving the first of two non-consecutive terms.


    If impeached, Pinera could have risked up to five years in jail.

    Applause could be heard coming from the presidential headquarters of the Palacio de La Moneda after it became mathematically clear that lawmakers had summoned enough support for the president to avoid impeachment, even though a dozen senators still had to add their own votes.


    Pandora Papers


    The Pandora Papers highlighted offshore transactions involving major political figures around the world.

    They linked Pinera to the sale of a mining company called Dominga, through a company owned by his children, to businessman Carlos Delano, a close friend of the president, for $152 million.

    The papers said a large part of the operation was carried out in the British Virgin Islands, a tax haven.

    Chile's opposition has said Pinera benefitted himself and his family with the sale through information he had in the exercise of his office.

    It says Pinera's involvement pushed up the sale price.

    The Chamber of Deputies voted last week to open impeachment proceedings.

    "Acting as president, he benefited (himself) and his family in a direct way, with information that he had in the exercise of his office," opposition lawmaker Jaime Naranjo said at the time.

    The call for the impeachment of Pinera -- who is in the final stretch of a second term that began in March 2018 -- was presented in early October by members of the opposition, who took 15 hours last week to read the charges against the president, apparently to allow one lawmaker to complete a quarantine period and still be allowed to vote.

    Pinera, one of the richest men in Chile, has denied any wrongdoing and said he was cleared in a 2017 investigation of the transaction.

    When the new investigation was opened last month, Pinera said he had "full confidence that the courts, as they have already done, will confirm there were no irregularities and also my total innocence."

    It is the second impeachment case brought against Pinera, after an unsuccessful attempt to remove him from office in 2019 over an at-times brutal crackdown on protesters angry over the yawning gap between rich and poor in Chile.

    Chileans are set to head to the polls November 21 to elect Pinera's successor and a new congress before the president's term ends in March.

    © 2021 AFP

    Reports from the land: N.W.T. hunters and trappers describe unusually warm fall

    Temperatures in October were, on average, 4.2 C warmer

     than last year

    Allen Kogiak stands in front of a snowmobile that he raised off the ground in May 2021, to prepare for flooding in Aklavik, N.W.T. The fall brings different climate change concerns. He's worried about people travelling on ice that is late to freeze, and what the future will look like for his grandchildren. (Kate Kyle/CBC)

    Our planet is changing. So is our journalism. This story is part of a CBC News initiative entitled Our Changing Planet to show and explain the effects of climate change and what is being done about it.


    A member of the Aklavik Hunters and Trappers Committee, who describes his job as being the "eyes and ears of the land," says the late arrival of cold weather in the N.W.T. is "going to have effects, down the line." 

    Allen Kogiak told CBC News a little more than a week ago that ice on the Peel Channel was taking a "long time" to form because of the mild fall temperatures — and that the river was still open in various places. 

    But people were already using the "young ice" for travel by snowmobile.

    "In my opinion, right now, it's kind of scary because of all that open water," he said. "In the past there's been a lot of drowning, because of people … driving right into the water. Hoping that doesn't happen this year." 

    Throughout October, the daily minimum temperature in Yellowknife (reflected by the top-most line on the graph below, in red) was on average 4.2 C warmer each day than it was last year (reflected by the line that drops the lowest, in green).

    The minimum temperatures were also several degrees warmer than the most recent 30-year average (the straight line, in blue) for each day, as calculated by Environment Canada, from 1981 to 2010.

    The Great Slave Snowmobile Association posted its first ice thickness assessment for bodies of water around Yellowknife on Sunday. It said no body of water had reached a thickness of six inches yet — which is the measurement at which the City of Yellowknife says people can walk on it.  

    By Nov. 15 last year, all those bodies of water had ice that was more than six inches thick.

    The late start to the freeze up has been noticed across the territory. 

    "Around here like, the water should be frozen," said Arthur Elleze, 50, from Fort Providence on Nov. 7. "It's still flowing, probably still good to go for a boat ride. And that's really, like, unusual." 

    'Everybody shot a moose'

    Elleze, who hunts and traps for his parents and regularly eats harvested meat, said he's noticed a change in animal behaviour too. 

    "Was a lot of moose this year," he remarked. "Everybody shot a moose." 

    A woman works on a piece of moose hide. Members of the Dene Nation, including Dene artist Melaw Nakehk'o, travelled to Nain, N.L., to teach members of Nunatsiavut how to work with moose hide in 2019. (Submitted by Melaw Nakehk'o)

    Warmer temperatures in northern regions of Canada, brought about by climate change, mean more moose are migrating further north.

    Bob Norwegian, a Fort Simpson resident who has helped the territory's environment and natural resources department with moose counts in the past, has noticed the change too. He said the presence of moose used to follow a pattern, and there would be lots of them every seven years or so. 

    "But the last few years ... every year, they seem like they're plentiful."

    Temperatures impact pelt quality

    If an unusually warm fall across the territory is the signal for a warm winter, Elleze said it would also impact pelts that are harvested by trappers like himself. A short, warm winter leads to lesser quality pelts. 

    "You need the cold weather for the fur to really change," he explained.

    For example, a beaver fur harvested now would be in a state of transition, with a mix of red and brown colour, he said. In the dead of winter though, it would be "really dark, dark brown." 

    Furs from the N.W.T.'s Genuine Mackenzie Valley Furs program on display in the office of Francois Rossouw, a furbearer biologist with the territory's Department of Environment and Natural Resources. (John Last/CBC)

    Norwegian, who said he does a "little trapping" for marten in the winter, said if you were to skin a marten in September, the inside of the hide would be black and you would almost be able to pluck out its fur. 

    "And then, as it gets really cold and wintry, when you skin the hide, on the inside it's pure white and when you're trying to pull on the hair, it's really, really tight," he explained. 

    "That's the way they like them."

    Trappers are given a base price for a pelt by a local game warden. Then, if it sells for higher at the fur auction in Ontario, the trapper is reimbursed the difference. Norwegian said a marten pelt would automatically earn a trapper $65 last year. 

    Fewer cold days

    Norwegian has been keeping a journal every day since the 1970s, where he records temperatures, "how the ice is behaving, and all that sort of thing."

    He's noticed a change in the climate over the past few decades, and said temperatures seldom got down to -50 F in the 70s. At the time, he said weather temperatures were discussed in Fahrenheit. Canada switched to the Celsius temperature scale in 1975. 

    Norwegian said his uncles and his dad were born back in the 1920s, and "they used to get to about 62 or 65 below zero in this neck of the woods." A temperature of -65 F is the equivalent of -53.9 C. 

    CBC News looked at Environment Canada records in Fort Simpson as far back as 1920, and found that the coldest temperature on record was -56.2 C on Feb 1, 1947. 

    Here's how many days temperatures hit -50 C or below in Fort Simpson, by year: 

    • Two days in 1933.
    • Three days in 1934.
    • Two days in 1935.
    • Three days in 1936.
    • One day in 1939.
    • Six days in 1947.
    • One day in 1968.
    • Two days in 1975.

    According to Environment Canada's data, no day has hit -50 C or below in Fort Simpson since 1975.

    "[You're] lucky if you see -42 anymore, for just a couple of days, and then it's back up to about -35," said Norwegian. "People figure that's really, really cold. But it isn't." 

    A look-out spot from a frosty trail outside Yellowknife on Nov. 3. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

    Although science points to greenhouse gas emissions as the source of a warming climate, Norwegian doesn't believe the changes he's seeing are a human-made problem. Elleze and Kogiak, however, certainly do.  

    "I think we're starting to see the effects of our damage to the Earth," said Elleze. Pointing to temperatures that are getting "warmer and warmer," he said "it's not the way I grew up in the bush ... it's not the same."

    Kogiak, meanwhile, worries about what the future will look like for his five grandchildren. 

    "It's already going full speed with climate change," he said. 

    "The only way we can mitigate it is trying to reduce our footprint."