Toronto Star

Machines to handle half of work tasks by 2025, report says

Predicted ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ could also create 133 million jobs

- JEREMY KAHN

Machines and automated software will be handling fully half of all workplace tasks within seven years, a new report from the World Economic Forum forecasts. But the group said technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, robotics, and precision medicine could create more jobs than they threaten.

In a study of executives and specialist­s across 12 industries, published Monday, the WEF concluded that this so-called “Fourth Industrial Revolution” could create 133 million jobs globally, while 75 million work- ers may be displaced.

Saadia Zahidi, head of the WEF’s Center for the New Economy and Society, said companies had “a moral and economic imperative” to invest in retraining and continuing education for their employees. “Without proactive approaches, businesses and workers may lose out,” she said.

The report is the latest in a series of efforts by academics, consultanc­ies and government­s to assess the impact of new technologi­es on employment. Previous studies, including an earlier one by the WEF, have generally forecast auto- mation will destroy more jobs than it creates.

The scale of projected displaceme­nt varies enormously between research groups, however. A Bank of England study in 2015 produced some of the bleakest figures, forecastin­g that as many as 80 million jobs in the U.S. and 15 million in the U.K. could be lost by 2035.

A McKinsey report in December produced one of the rosier assessment­s, forecastin­g jobs lost and created by new technology might be about equal by 2030.

In its latest analysis, the WEF said the effects of automation may vary substantia­lly across industries, and predicted job losses to be heaviest in mining, consumer, and informatio­n technology companies, and less within profession­al services firms.

Many new jobs may be less secure than in the past, as businesses are increasing­ly turning to contractor­s and freelancer­s, the Swiss foundation said. It warned there’s a significan­t gap between the skills workers currently have and those that may be required for future new roles.

It estimates more than half of employees at large companies would need significan­t retraining in order to take advantage of new opportunit­ies created by digital technology.

But it said half of all companies plan retraining only for “key roles,” and only one-third say they plan any retraining for at-risk workers.

Best known for throwing an annual summit of business and government leaders in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, the WEF said it based its forecast on a survey of senior executives, strategy officers and human resource specialist­s at 300 global companies, spanning 20 different countries.

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