National Post (National Edition)

‘ROBOTS DO NOT GET SICK’

Automation can help with labour, paper suggests

- CATARINA SARAIVA

While “automation” can be a scary word to some workers, it may actually help mitigate pandemic-fuelled job uncertaint­y and the depth of the recession, according to a working paper by two economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

As job uncertaint­y mounts, as seen in the current environmen­t of stay-at-home orders and business closings, demand drops, unemployme­nt increases and inflation falls, Sylvain Leduc and Zheng Liu write in Can Pandemic-Induced Job Uncertaint­y Stimulate Automation?

Companies that in turn automate some of the jobs formerly held by humans fuel an increase in labour productivi­ty.

That increase partly offsets the recessiona­ry impact of unemployme­nt and falling inflation, Leduc and Liu found.

“Workers can be exposed to health risks, and social distancing measures can reduce labour productivi­ty by hindering the ability to work.

“But robots do not get sick,” Leduc and Liu wrote in the paper, posted on the San Francisco Fed’s website on Friday.

“If a production process can be automated, a firm can use a robot instead of a worker to perform some risky tasks. In this sense, automation provides a hedge against job uncertaint­y stemming from the pandemic.”

Employers cut a record 20.5 million jobs in April as state and local officials shut down everything from restaurant­s to factories in an effort to contain the spread of the disease.

Leduc and Liu warn that the pandemic could have long-term ramificati­ons, as the possibilit­y of future waves of outbreaks, and renewed stay-home orders, may weigh on uncertaint­y.

“Anticipati­ng potential future disruption­s from the pandemic, households and firms may postpone long-term decisions, such as investment and hiring. The pandemic-induced uncertaint­y can thus have potentiall­y important consequenc­es for the depth of the downturn and the strength of the recovery.”

They also note that depressed demand does reduce the incentive for companies to invest in automation, but their analysis shows that, overall, the probabilit­y of automation increases with job uncertaint­y.

“Absent the automation channel, an uncertaint­y shock would lead to a much deeper recession, with a sharper increase in unemployme­nt and a larger decline in inflation,” they wrote.

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