Your recipe is straight out of Marx's book. If you honestly think that a human will be caring for the old and sick in 10-15 years then you really don't understand the state of innovation we have achieved. What we need in 10-15 years is lots of data scientists, technical designers and architects. Even programmers will lose their jobs in a short few years. But no problem, according to you they can easily find a job mopping the floor of automated factory floors.
In case you have slept, chatgpt and its derivatives will within the next two or three years completely displace any and all editors, journalists, writers, translators,...but hey... They can always become YouTubers right?
In case you have slept, chatgpt and its derivatives will within the next two or three years completely displace any and all editors, journalists, writers, translators,...but hey... They can always become YouTubers right?
This is nonsense. Really. Automation during the 20th century eliminated entire huge job categories and descriptions. Telephone operators, mechanical draftsmen, miners, assembly-line workers and shipbuilders have all been replaced by machines or software. Not to mention farming, where one guy today does the work of hundreds from a century ago. And this all happened during a time when women were entering formal work, boosting the labor participation rate (and thus labor supply) by 50% or more. Yet unemployment today is at historic lows.
The market is more adaptable than you think, the universe of human consumer demand is broader than you think, and 'jobs' are much more social and political constructions than you think. 150 years ago a 'job' was 80 hours per week on the factory floor, now it's down to 40 in your pajamas with Netflix on in the background. 9-to-5 can become 9-to-noon, or Monday-Friday can become Monday-Wednesday. The government can require that companies hire 20% of the population as diversity consultants or whatever. And then, given aging demographics in rich countries, there will definitely be huge numbers of jobs created in the coming decades to care for old and sick people.
I highly doubt coding will be a skill in the future. Certainly when most people learn it. It's a language, and a language won't give you a lot of extra 'skill'. Especially when everybody learns it, you need scarcity for something to be of high value. Think lowcode development. It's the added value, which is often more sophisticated which brings the extra dollars, and industries like trade, dominant systems (like dominant currencies) and ultimately art - in it's many manifestations.