The Niagara Falls Review

A robot worker invasion?

U.S. feds shrug it off, Canada feds fret, so who’s right?

- ALEXANDER PANETTA Wired

WASHINGTON — Should we be preparing for the coming invasion of job-stealing, career-crushing robots? It’s a question that’s moved from science-fiction novels to the tip of policy-makers’ tongues.

Canadian and American policymake­rs have just delivered very different answers.

Canada’s finance minister tabled a budget that mentioned artificial intelligen­ce and skills training dozens of times, with entire sections on each subject and $5.2 billion for worker re-training.

His U.S. counterpar­t: not so worried about a wave of job-killing automation.

“It’s not even on our radar screen,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin told the Axios website last week. “(It’s) 50-100 more years (away)... I’m not worried at all,” he said, adding: “In fact, I’m optimistic.”

The Trump administra­tion’s budget proposal didn’t specifical­ly mention skills, automation, or artificial intelligen­ce a single time. So who’s right? Silicon Valley reacted with swiftness and stupefacti­on. Some of the world’s most famous tech billionair­es are expressing alarm about rapid change approachin­g, starting with automation potentiall­y wiping out millions of driving jobs.

The headlines in the tech press were scathing. magazine wrote: “Hate to Break It to Steve Mnuchin, But AI’s Already Taking Jobs.” TechCrunch said: “Steve Mnuchin has been compromise­d (by robots).”

Jerry Kaplan, who lectures at Stanford University on the social, economic, and legal questions raised by AI, said: “I think Mnuchin’s comments regarding AI are ill-informed, an unfortunat­e hallmark of the new U.S. administra­tion. He may not be concerned about it, but just about anyone who has a real job and does productive work should be.”

Yet the picture isn’t exactly black and white.

First of all, those few comments from Mnuchin don’t encapsulat­e the full spectrum of attitudes in Washington. Just this week, the White House announced the creation of the Office of American Innovation.

The new office will be led by President Donald Trump’s son-inlaw — in addition to being tasked with the Middle East peace file, Jared Kushner will now lead an office with a half-dozen different loosely related mandates including: developing a “workforce of the future,” veterans’ services, and the opioid epidemic.

Congress clearly sees big changes coming.

Two committees are preparing for self-driving cars in the House of Representa­tives — the commerce committee is considerin­g manufactur­ing standards, and the infrastruc­ture committee is contemplat­ing next-generation roads.

The infrastruc­ture chair described Wednesday being mesmerized by a self-driving SUV. Bill Shuster even defended the technology as safe — when an accident occurs during testing, as happened with Uber days ago, he said it’s usually caused by a human error in another vehicle.

“We went 35 miles (in our test). It was incredible,” Shuster told a panel event.

“It will change the way we drive. It will help improve, or reduce, congestion... We’re talking about tremendo us savings in lives, in cost, in damage.”

Yet it might also cost millions of driving jobs.

What happens to truck-drivers? Or to restaurant workers, for that matter — even Trump’s first pick for labour secretary, who ran fast-food chains, publicly mused about the benefits of replacing his workers with robots.

It’s not so cut-and-dried there either.

Estimates of the job impact range broadly. While a famous Oxford study said almost half of human jobs were at risk of automation, a more granular-level McKinsey study suggested most jobs will still exist — but half of specific tasks will disappear within 20 to 50 years.

This week the U.S. government published a study that attempted to put even more precise numbers to it.

Theconclus­ion:robotsstea­lhuman jobs, but not many.

The research for the U.S. National Bureau on Economic Research found that one robot per 1,000 workers reduced the employment population by 0.34 percentage points, and salaries by 0.5 per cent.

Itthenesti­matedthefu­tureimpact, in a world with more robots.

Under two scenarios, one with a conservati­ve estimate for robot-proliferat­ion, and a more dramatic scenario, it estimated employment rates would fall between 0.54 and 1.76 percentage points, while wages fell 0.75 to 2.6 per cent.

Frank Pasquale takes a middlegrou­nd view. The Yale fellow and University of Maryland professor has written extensivel­y about the legal, ethical, and social challenges of AI. He points to encouragin­g research, about new jobs replacing old ones.

For example, James Bessen has written about how ATM machines haven’t replaced bank tellers. On the contrary. The Boston University researcher charts an increase in bank employment — workers have stopped handing out cash, and now sell financial products. He finds similar results for paralegals and supermarke­t checkout clerks.

David Autor of MIT uses the example of car windshield­s: they’re now installed by robots, he says, but humans remove the broken ones, fix them, and fit in replacemen­ts. Pasquale’s conclusion? Mnuchin should be a little more worried, he says. Not panicked, but concerned about the transition, and the many humans whose livelihood­s could be sideswiped by fastapproa­ching change. That especially applies to people who make less than $20 an hour, he said.

“I think that is too sanguine a view (from Mnuchin),” he said.

“The bottom line: we have to have a robust and substantiv­e policy for transition­ing people in areas that are imminently going to be automated.”

 ?? TODD KOROL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau, centre, operates a robot with student Spencer Pelzer, right, while Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi looks on during a tour of the robotics lab last week at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary.
TODD KOROL/THE CANADIAN PRESS Finance Minister Bill Morneau, centre, operates a robot with student Spencer Pelzer, right, while Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi looks on during a tour of the robotics lab last week at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary.

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