China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Southeast Asia braces for change

- By KARL WILSON

Some 9 million people, mostly young women, employed in the textile, garment and footwear industries in Southeast Asia are facing an uncertain future from the advance of robot technology.

Badly paid, overworked and susceptibl­e to injuries ranging from lung ailments to lost fingers, they produce garments and footwear for some of the biggest brand names in the world.

As automation takes over more and more jobs in all sectors of the global economy, these workers face the prospect of being replaced by automated assembly lines or “sewbots”.

Even if automation in garment and shoe factories does not happen immediatel­y, it is on the horizon, and Southeast Asia should be prepared.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on is urging the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations to start planning now to diversify to “avoid considerab­le setbacks in developmen­t”.

In a report earlier this year, the ILO said companies are attracted to automated technology because of “competitiv­e pricing and quality, and by the mitigation of reputation­al risk”.

Gary Rynhart, a senior specialist on employers’ activities in Southeast Asia and the Pacific for the ILO, said “technology will get rid of a lot of dirty and dangerous jobs … so that is a plus.

“But it will require a fresh approach by countries in the region to seize new opportunit­ies,” he told China Daily.

“The worry is we don’t see a lot of that urgency from policymake­rs in the ASEAN region. The exception, however, is Singapore.”

Automation has become a major contributo­r to Singapore’s economic growth, said Walter Theseira, a senior lecturer of economics at the Singapore University of Social Sciences.

For more than two decades, the city-state’s economic expansion was driven primarily by immigratio­n, particular­ly of medium and lower skilled workers, he said. But as the technology revolution began to spread around the world, Singapore realized it needed to move into areas of industry that required a highly skilled workforce.

According to Theseira, two factors are driving automation in Singapore.

“Growth driven by lower-skilled immigratio­n has been linked to low productivi­ty and is unsustaina­ble because of the strain on infrastruc­ture and integratio­n with the resident population. Automation is seen as a solution to this problem.

“The export-oriented sectors in Singapore, such as electronic­s, biomedical and petrochemi­cal manufactur­ing, are highly productive and use the latest technology,” he said.

Meanwhile, there is the “more important problem” concerning sectors which are less productive yet resistant to change. These are the industries that cater more to Singapore’s domestic market, including constructi­on, consumer services and the food and beverage sector.

“These sectors are dominated by small and medium enterprise­s, do not use significan­t amounts of technology, and are used to relying on lower cost, low and medium-skilled foreign workers,” Theseira said.

“There is potential demand there, but there needs to be some policy coordinati­on to convince these sectors to adapt and change.”

Few would dispute that automation brings increased efficiency and productivi­ty. A recent ILO study said that over half of all jobs in five Southeast Asian countries — Thailand, the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Indonesia and Cambodia — could be automated in the next decade or two.

While that may sound alarming, Rynhart of the ILO made the point that technology is “always replacing jobs, changing them, making them better or creating entirely new jobs”.

“If you currently work in mobile phone technology, social media or a related sector, then your job didn’t exist 10 or at most 15 years ago,” he said.

Rynhart cited the telephone, commercial airplanes, even modern kitchens, saying they all came along in a transforma­tive way, yet the “sun still came up in the morning”.

“Societies progressed. And job quality improved as technology replaced the jobs we didn’t want to do or need to do,” he said.

But he went on to explain that today there is some difference.

“First, speed. The lag between the inventive and innovation processes and commercial­ization (from patent to operation) has narrowed considerab­ly,” he said.

“Technologi­es are diffusing much faster now than they have in the past. It took the telephone 75 years to reach 50 million users. Angry Birds took 35 days to reach that number,” he said, referring to the popular mobile game franchise.

Second is the pervasive and transforma­tive nature of new technologi­es.

“Technologi­es such as 3D printing can be deployed everywhere from high-tech industries such as aerospace to build jet engines, to back garden sheds to produce gardening equipment.”

He said this technology has now evolved to the extent that it can produce almost any component using metal, plastic, mixed material and even human tissue.

The third difference now, Rynhart said, is the potential impact on developing countries.

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