by Tyler M | Jan 23, 2026 | Post Labor Economics
Bottom line: The evidence from 2023–2025 does not falsify the post-labor thesis—but it narrows it. AI complementarity exists, but it is unevenly distributed, weakly transmitted to wages, and concentrated among experienced workers. Reinstatement remains materially...
by Tyler M | Jan 16, 2026 | Post Labor Economics
Falsification Conditions for the Post-Labor Thesis Wage Share Reversal, Policy Capacity, and What Would Prove Me Wrong If the post-labor thesis is correct, labor’s declining share of national income is not a temporary artifact of cycles, measurement error, or policy...
by Tyler M | Jan 9, 2026 | Post Labor Economics
If the post-labor thesis is wrong, it will not fail quietly. It will fail by leaving a generation over-prepared for jobs that no longer exist—and under-prepared for the ones that do. Last year, I set out to map the structural risks of an AI-driven economy: declining...
by Tyler M | Jan 2, 2026 | Post Labor Economics
From Static Distribution to Homeostatic Social Control By Tyler Maddox Executive Abstract Current state distribution models—welfare, UBI, energy subsidies—operate as open-loop systems: policy is set, resources are distributed, and outcomes are measured months or years...