Millennium Post

Industrial robots render most low-skilled US labour obsolete

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PARIS: Donald Trump has been crowing as companies including Ford renounce plans to move factories to Mexico. But the main beneficiar­ies of this shift back to the US aren't saying much by way of celebratio­n –industrial robots don't tend to speak.

While globalisat­ion's detractors blame countries such as China and Mexico for stealing the factory jobs of the West, experts point to less obvious culprits which are harder to scapegoat and to overcome in an interconne­cted economy with complex supply chains.

Since US manufactur­ing employment peaked in the late 1970s, according to Michael Hicks of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University in Indiana, “95 percent of job losses were due to productivi­ty improvemen­ts including automation and computer technology, rather than trade”.

Indiana is one of the rustbelt states where Trump tri- umphed in November, and the president-elect has promised a punitive border tax against outsourcin­g companies as he bids to become "the greatest jobs producer that God ever created". But while the US economy is pumping out manufactur­ed goods in record volumes, it is achieving that feat with 7.3 million fewer factory hands than in 1979, government figures show.

Automation has transforme­d the productivi­ty of manufactur­ing since industrial robots first started painting, cutting, welding and assembling in the 1960s.

And experts point to more recent innovation­s such as artificial intelligen­ce, management apps and 3D printing as new threats to shop-floor workers as well as to white-collar staff.

Hicks –who has known former Indiana governor Mike Pence, Trump's incoming vice president, for years –dismissed recent announceme­nts by Ford, Indiana air-conditioni­ng brand Carrier and others as “political theatre”.

“The apparent change of heart of these American companies is due to the hard math of expected tax cuts and regulatory changes (under the Trump administra­tion),” he told AFP in a phone interview, noting that under company projection­s, robots rather than wages will account for the bulk of planned investment that is being redirected from Mexico to the US.

Vows to renegotiat­e trade pacts, or declare China a currency cheat, played well for Trump on the campaign trail but trends such as automation have already rendered much low-skilled US labour obsolete.

The total output of US manufactur­ing rose more than 250 per cent from 1980 to 2015, but its workforce slumped by roughly 40 per cent in that time, according to analysis by the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington.

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