Something we're overlooking here....
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2011 3:14 pm
What evidence do any of us have that the type of work (and the demand for) attorneys do is at the very least, relatively constant? (even assuming some semblance of a stabilizing economy in the next decade)
Are we sure that the demand for what a society needs attorneys for isn't severly contracting, due to techonolgy, the increasingly globalized encomic model of the world, etc, etc?
I'm not sure how many of you believe that we have a truly efficient (and non-manipulated) "free market" system, but regardless of your thoughts on that are, any purely global, capatalist system isn't designed to support things that can (through techonology, outsourcing, etc) become more efficient.
Efficiency, in the case of our legal system, means less lawyers. A lot less.
I just wanted to get some of your thoughts on these concerns.... I just don't see future economies relying on an antiquated legal model involving a flood of lawyers anymore. I see more and more legal work being outsourced, or made more efficient through technology and so forth.
Are we sure that the demand for what a society needs attorneys for isn't severly contracting, due to techonolgy, the increasingly globalized encomic model of the world, etc, etc?
I'm not sure how many of you believe that we have a truly efficient (and non-manipulated) "free market" system, but regardless of your thoughts on that are, any purely global, capatalist system isn't designed to support things that can (through techonology, outsourcing, etc) become more efficient.
Efficiency, in the case of our legal system, means less lawyers. A lot less.
I just wanted to get some of your thoughts on these concerns.... I just don't see future economies relying on an antiquated legal model involving a flood of lawyers anymore. I see more and more legal work being outsourced, or made more efficient through technology and so forth.