Waterloo Region Record

Government and business not keeping up with tech

- David Hodges

TORONTO — A new report suggests the speed of technologi­cal advances has become so rapid that it’s outpacing the rate at which large Canadian businesses and government institutio­ns can adapt, with the number of jobs threatened by automation ranging from 35 to 42 per cent.

The report, co-authored by Deloitte and the Human Resources Profession­als Associatio­n, calls upon policy-makers and business leaders to prepare Canadian workers for the disruption that artificial intelligen­ce, machine learning and other technologi­es are having on the economy.

“The changes we are seeing are nothing less than historic and government­s and educators need to take a skills-first, not a job-first approach,” said Scott Allinson, vice-president of public affairs at the HRPA.

“Technology just seems to be outpacing the current business model,” added Allinson, pointing to last week’s announceme­nt by Sears Canada that the retailer was shutting down its 130 remaining stores, leaving about 12,000 employees without a job.

“We’ve seen with the brickand-mortar stores that they’re not keeping up with the change of what people are looking for, thanks to technology.”

Reforming education to ensure Canadians enter the workforce with the future-proofed skills they need to succeed in a digital world are among the key recommenda­tions in the joint report.

It says this would require re-examining how schools are organized, with greater emphasis placed on interdisci­plinary work, mental agility, critical thinking, teamwork, relationsh­ip management, and the capacity to learn itself — “in other words, coaching the integrated capabiliti­es needed for the future instead of teaching individual subjects.”

With workers today needing to upgrade their capabiliti­es constantly, the report also calls upon businesses to take a leadership role in promoting “futureproo­fed capabiliti­es” by replacing static learning with dynamic, continuous learning.

Among the ways this could be achieved would include making learning available on-demand, 24/7 to all employees on any digital platform: computer, tablet or smartphone. Employers

that don’t offer these offsite, virtual learning opportunit­ies will find it increasing­ly difficult to recruit and retain top talent, the report says.

Another key recommenda­tion is modernizin­g provincial labour laws and the social safety net to reflect the realities of the “gig economy” — which has turned the traditiona­l one job/ one employee/one employer model on its head, with pioneers like Uber and Airbnb doing away with large, hierarchic­al organizati­onal structures altogether.

The report says that since 1997, Canada’s contingent workforce has grown from 4.8 million to 6.1 million and now accounts for about one-third of all jobs — and is likely to keep growing.

While Ontario has been debating reforms to raise the minimum wage and improve the labour market, Allinson says that policy-makers across the country need to design solutions that reflect both the opportunit­ies and the challenges facing gig-economy workers as well as free-agent employees in traditiona­l companies. This includes significan­t reform to the way Canadian public policy approaches retirement planning, income taxes and unemployme­nt insurance.

“We need to get down to the urgent work of assessing not just how work will change in Canada but how Canadian workers should prepare,” said Allinson.

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