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Businesses Robotics

Number of Workers in Jobs That Can Be Automated Falls (ft.com) 105

Employment has fallen in jobs that can be easily automated and risen in those which are trickier for robots, damping hopes that higher minimum wages could unleash a wave of investment in automation. From a report: Statistics from the Office for National Statistics published on Monday showed that in 2011 about 8.1 per cent of workers were in jobs with a "high" risk of automation, but by 2017 that had fallen to 7.4 per cent. [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source and original study.] The ONS report highlighted that fewer workers remain in areas that can be easily automated, such as dry cleaning and laundry jobs, which fell by 28 per cent between 2011 and 2017, and retail cashier work, which fell by 25.3 per cent over the same period.

Since the financial crisis the UK has enjoyed rapid growth in employment combined with one of the lowest rates of investment spending of any large rich country. Many economists have suggested that hiring cheap labour instead of investment in new techniques is behind the country's weak rate of productivity growth. Policymakers had hoped that increasing the minimum wage would spur companies to replace low-paid jobs with machines, in turn boosting growth in productivity. [...] But the ONS analysis suggests the increase in employment over the past decade has not come from jobs that could easily be done by machines. Instead, since 2011 the UK lost jobs with a high or medium risk of automation, like shelf fillers, but gained them in areas with a low risk, such as physiotherapy.

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Number of Workers in Jobs That Can Be Automated Falls

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  • This makes me think of a robot pushing a human worker off a cliff.
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      This makes me think of a robot pushing a human worker off a cliff.

      Do you have stairs in your house?

    • This makes me think of a robot pushing a human worker off a cliff.

      It makes me think of farmers in the late-19th and early 20th centuries. 80% of the workforce in 1850, 5% by 1950. Society didn't collapse then, won't now.

      It'll change, of course. But then, without that movement from the farms to industry back then, we'd not be typing this stuff at each other, since most of us would be working dawn to dusk on farms....

  • Yes, jobs that can be automated will be replaced by automation. There is a reason why we no longer have a lot of jobs (outside historical reenactment, or custom work) like Type Setters, Black Smiths, Weavers...
    Being that companies can now automate a lot of their entry level jobs, this means over time a companies competitive advantage would be lessen (as all the machines will make the products the same way and at the same quality) That means they will need to put resources into Support, and Client Relation

    • How does "client support" help anyone in North America. Usually when I call a support desk it is clear the person isn't local.
    • And many of those old jobs that used to be automated also resulted in signficant problems in society, with protests and the rise of the workers movement in general. The word "sabotage" comes from this. It also caused a major migration from rural areas into metropolitan areas. There's no reason to think that continued automation will happen without the corresponding societal problems.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )

      The stocks are mostly shared in high amounts with other wealthy people who only care for the short term gain.

      Wrong and wrong. Most stocks are "owned" by middle class workers in the form of pension plans and IRAs [taxpolicycenter.org]. And wealthy people generally don't buy/sell stock very often; they buy and hold for years, sometimes generations.

      • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

        This seems highly unlikely.

        I know not all wealth is stock, but a lot of it is. The top 10% of the population hold 76% of the wealth.

        The skew away from stock for the richest would have to be extreme for the middle class to hold 50% of the stock.

        The 50th=90th percentile hold 23% of the wealth, so they'd have to be holding 3x as much in stock relative to the top 10% to be holding 50% of the stock.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • All the products will be costing the same to produce with automation

      Assuming they're made to the same design & spec, with the same materials, using the same machines and in the same locations.

      Not impossible but very improbable.

  • by bluefoxlucid ( 723572 ) on Monday March 25, 2019 @12:36PM (#58331278) Homepage Journal

    It takes 15% as much human labor to load and unload canned goods when using wooden shipping pallets versus when just stacking them directly on the truck.

    Pneumatic construction tools.

    The hot-blast furnace (86,000 hours of labor became 200 hours of labor).

    Intensive agriculture.

    Computers.

    Could you imagine digging out a basement with only hand shovels?

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      My old house had a hand-nailed woodwork lattice and plaster over it. Imagine building a house like that now without drywall, without long siding but paying every contractor $120/h for those jobs.

      Houses would cost millions of dollars.

      • My old house had a hand-nailed woodwork lattice and plaster over it.

        I grew up in an old Victorian like that.
        Between the framed lathe and plaster interior walls and the exterior brick wall was a space anywhere between 6" and 4'.
        There were spots in some of the closets to get into this area, sort of hidden compartments that me and my siblings would play in as kids.
        Our friends were mostly terrified of the house and the spaces!
        It had a total scooby doo vibe.

    • Could you imagine digging out a basement with only hand shovels?

      Tell Bender it's a grave and you could break records.

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday March 25, 2019 @12:46PM (#58331338)

    Employment has fallen in jobs that can be easily automated and risen in those which are trickier for robots, damping hopes that higher minimum wages could unleash a wave of investment in automation.

    It's been this way since the start of the industrial revolution and even before. Some jobs get automated by new technology and those people have to find or create new jobs. As a species we're quite good at that. Generally the automation enables jobs that didn't exist previously. If you need evidence look at the very device you are using to read these very words. Smartphones are a multi-billion dollar business that didn't even exist 20 years ago. The web didn't even exist 30 years ago yet you'd be hard pressed to argue it hasn't been a net creator of jobs and prosperity. (note I didn't say a uniform creator of prosperity) That's not to say there aren't some bumps and bruises along the way for some people but in the end our society ends up better off pretty much every time.

    There is this fear that somehow this time it will be different. That somehow devices have finally gotten clever enough to replace people permanently with nothing left for people to do. Problem with that idea is that it presumes there is a finite amount of economically useful work which is an idea that has never been true in the history of man. It also presumes that we have no control over automation politically, economically, or physically which also isn't true. One of our defining traits is that we are tool makers. Our tools enable us to do more than we could do without them. Instead of just making a product we use machines to help us make it so we can spend more time selling it or improving it or funding it.

    • there was decades of unemployment and social strife following the industrial revolution. Long before it was a generic insult Luddites formed their group for a reason. We're pretty terrible at responding to rapid change. Hell, we went through two meat grinders with the automation of warfare and bombed large swaths of the world to the stone age before we backed off a little. And we mostly backed off because the major industrialized nations have nukes.

      You mentioned we'll have to find or make new jobs, but
    • Problem with that idea is that it presumes there is a finite amount of economically useful work

      It's not to do with the amount of economically useful work. It's the amount of economically useful work that can't be done cheaper, better, faster, at a lower cost, or cheaper by robots.[1]

      It also presumes that we have no control over automation politically, economically, or physically which also isn't true.

      If you belong to the same "we" that I do - the 99% - then I won't say we have no control. Just very v

    • I think the real fear right now, is the main thing that's different now versus 20 years ago... is that computers are starting to delve in the intellectual. Deep blue beat humans by painstaking work of putting years worth of professional chess games into the computer and letting them learn from the masters.

      With alpha go, they did that at first, but then basically they made alphago zero, where they effectively threw out all the human data. just left the learning algorythm, and had it learn by playing against

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Monday March 25, 2019 @12:46PM (#58331340) Journal

    Number of Workers in Jobs That Can Be Automated Falls

    This headline is from 1887.

  • by HeckRuler ( 1369601 ) on Monday March 25, 2019 @12:47PM (#58331346)

    If their job gets automated... they no longer work there.

    Here, lemme rephrase that a little: "Number of remaining workers in jobs that can be automated falls."

  • Policymakers had hoped that increasing the minimum wage would spur companies to replace low-paid jobs with machines, in turn boosting growth in productivity.

    And suddenly you have to wonder about all the calls and campaigns for a $15 minimum wage here in the US and if they weren't after the opposite of what was claimed.

    • I can't read the submitted link, but there is no mention of this in the alternate sources added by the editor. I had the same reaction, I never heard any policy maker espouse this claim. Now what they might be secretly thinking is anybody's guess.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ...Because there will be no jobs left.
  • We really need to start discerning between quality jobs that will pay a living wage and crap jobs. I think most people today are working but there is a huge problem finding jobs that are full time, pay well, and not based on contract. The gig economy is one way where people who used to have normal jobs are working in a very temporary fashion for small money. Gig workers should not even be counted as employed. Seems to be a lot of temporary work out there but nothing stable.
    • and every time he finds something they start moving to outsource him. The only reason the last job he had lasted as long as it did is they first tried to automate, that didn't work, so they outsourced.

      And for the record, while the automation didn't work out the door it would have eventually, but it was cheaper to outsource now than wait. The offshore guys who took his last job are all on borrowed time.
      • Is your friend pursuing jobs beyond entry level, and is he putting any effort into training for a profession?
    • People that put in some effort to train themselves get good jobs. Learn a trade, get a diploma, take some online classes, read some books... and opportunity increases.

      I'm making six figure salary with skills from my hobby...

      • You're pretty lucky if you found a place that was willing to hire you for "hobby skills". Every place I have ever applied just want to know what I did for an actual company, they skip over the hobby section even if it does contain relevant skills. Experience doesn't matter if it doesn't come on a company name they know about.
        • no luck involved, they don't know I learned skills from hobby and then used them on prior job where I wasn't hired to do that.

          • So you lied to them then. Well yeah it's pretty easy to get a job if you lie.
            • No lies at all. How exactly is it a lie if I took on more responsibilities and used the skills I learned from hobby where I worked, then claimed those skills as used on the job on resume to get next job?

              This is how you grow your skill set and become more valuable to employer. Maybe it's so alien to you and many others because you are lazy and rather whine?

              • I guess that's a different way of looking at it. The thing is how do you list it on your resume if you can't put it under 'job roles'? It wasn't a job role, it was something you chose for yourself to do.
                • if I did systems admin for an employer it become a role, how could it not be a role?

                  • You made it sound like your 'hobby' was something which is nothing to do with systems admin, like maybe developing something. So unless your job role is 'developer' then you can't really talk about anything you developed under the system admin role.
                    • My job that I was hired to do had nothing to do with systems admin, nor development. At the time I was hired those were hobbies only.

                      BUT I took those duties on at the employer by my own choice after a couple years besides my regular engineering job. Adminned Unix CADD / CAE systems, later the VAX cluster we bought that became our central server, then customized the CADD system, the estimating system, and the scheduling system. All from my hobby skills, not from any schooling which mostly had to do with

                    • Ok but you were hired as an engineer and you took on system admin. On your resume it says 'Engineer' 2016-2019 or whatever so there you put your Engineering duties. Where do you put your system admin duties?
                    • Obviously I listed them right with the other duties. Just like I also listed my role as trainer of multiple departments in use of new networked computer systems, I wasn't hired to do that either but these things things are useful skills that prospective employers will find attractive.

                      I'm confused why you think there is a problem. Why do you think that people can only list duties you imagine belong under a job. The real world's jobs very different than any cookie cutter description.

                    • Let's use system admin as an example. Since this wasn't your main job role, I can't be assured that your manager can effectively confirm how proficient you are at it or how involved you were with it. You may have worked on it for 15 minutes and decided to put it in your resume and no one would be the wiser. Sure I could ask you detailed questions about it if I know what I'm doing but often hiring managers don't know the job they are hiring for that well.

                      I just never would have thought to bother listing
                    • I wouldn't work for an IT manager who wasn't technically astute and couldn't ask in-depth questions. As for that job I came from, my accomplishments were verifiable. For example, could I restore from "bare metal" a CADD station (we had IRIX, Solaris and Windows) that had failed that the Vax cluster was making backup? Yes, I could and did. Did the custom template files and routines I made for the CADD system work and save hundreds of hours of engineer and designers time every year? Yes, they did and manag

                    • Yeah the problem is my manager supports my side ventures but doesn't really know anything about what I'm doing. Also my problem is if I included all my hobbies and job riles, my one job would take up a two page resume on its own.
                    • And it's not that he doesn't know technology. He is 'technologically astute' but there are few people that really understand all kinds of tech from hardware to development.
  • In Robot Maintence!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This summary is weird. It's like they don't realize there are fewer people employed in automatable jobs because those jobs are now becoming automated.

  • Technology comes in waves of vast improvements. The notion that a job is not so easy to automate can vanish in a few months when breakthrough X takes place. The greatest buffer to rapid change is financial as the cost of change in investments creates some pain and anxiety. How many machine shops would be so much better off buying a $500,000 five axis milling machine that cuts using water with precise results? The catch is that so far smaller shops just can't buy the good stuff.

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