The return of the son of the thought experiment
Remember my thought experiment on what would happen if all necessary goods and services could be produced by 25% of the available work force? And Paul Krugman's op-ed that, though not directed at me of course, showed how the "lump of labor fallacy" explained why that wasn't even a question to ask? Well, Calpundit links to a bit in the L.A. Times by Marshall Brain (what a name!) that's pretty much on the same subject.
With robots doing the work, we should all be on perpetual vacation. Unfortunately, in the structure of our current economy, that is not what will happen.
Wrong link. See, the ideal state is, depending on your outlook, perfect efficiency or perfect indolence. Maximum output from minimum input means the ideal state is to get everything for doing nothing. This is a common thread stretching from royalty owning everything through investment capitalism, the trend in labor negotiations, playing Lotto, the fight against inheritance taxes, everything. Success is, by definition, breaking the link between work and income.
The problems caused by the transition to a robotic economy will be twofold. The easier one is the link between income and subsistence. The harder nut will be the link between work and self-image.