âAny sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a luxuryâuntil itâs not.â
In the early 1920s, if you wanted a refrigerator, you were part of the elite. The first electric fridgesâbulky, loud, and experimentalâcost the equivalent of $7,000 to $15,000 in todayâs dollars. They were marvels of innovation but inaccessible to all but the wealthiest households.
Fast forward to today: 99.8% of U.S. households own a refrigerator. Theyâre so commonplace that we hardly think about themâuntil they break.
Now imagine weâre at the beginning of the same curve, not for food storage, but for household robots.
đ Historical Tech Adoption: The Refrigerator Curve
Take a moment to explore this interactive chart from Our World in Data. It tracks the adoption of various home technologiesâfrom refrigerators to microwaves to dishwashersâacross the 20th century.
Hereâs what the refrigeratorâs rise looked like:
- 1920sâ30s: Early adopters only; ~10% of households
- 1940s: Over 50% adoption, thanks to Freon technology and mass production
- 1950s: Ownership skyrockets past 80% after WWII
- By 1960: Nearly universal in U.S. homes
In roughly 30â40 years, refrigerators went from a rich manâs curiosity to a household necessity. Price dropped. Reliability improved. Social expectations shifted.
đ¤ Robot Labor Is on the Same Curve
Elon Musk has claimed that every household will eventually have a humanoid robotâa general-purpose machine that can walk, see, understand commands, and perform physical labor. His company Tesla is building âOptimus,â a robot intended to work in factories first, then homes.
This might sound futuristic. But so did refrigerators once.
Currently:
- A robot costs $20,000â$100,000
- Only companies or the ultra-wealthy can afford one
- Reliability is limited, and functionality is narrow
But if history is a guide, we might see a similar trajectory:
| Year | Phase | Approximate Robot Cost |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Early adopters only | $20kâ$100k |
| 2035 | Middle-class adoption begins | $5kâ$15k |
| 2045 | Widespread, household norm | <$3k |
Just as refrigerators eliminated the need for daily ice deliveries and manual food preservation, robots could eventually eliminate repetitive home laborâcleaning, organizing, even assisting the elderly.
đ The Inequality Question
Of course, global access will vary. In the U.S., even $1,000 robot labor might feel cheap. But in parts of India or sub-Saharan Africa, it could be out of reach for decades without interventionâjust as electricity and refrigerators took far longer to reach the developing world.
This raises critical questions for post-labor economics:
- Will robots become tools of empowermentâor deepen the divide?
- Who will own the robotsâindividuals, corporations, or governments?
- Should we envision public ârobot librariesâ like we once had rural electrification programs?
đ The Past is Prologue
When we think about technological change, itâs tempting to view each new device as unprecedented. But the story of household refrigerators shows a clear pattern: steep initial cost, followed by mass adoption and ubiquity.
Robots may follow the same arc. And if they do, the fridge might just be their closest ancestorânot in function, but in social and economic impact.
Explore the data here:
đ Our World in Data â Technology Adoption Chart