Millennium Post

Surviving the next industrial revolution

Impact of robotics, AI on job creation is increasing­ly becoming a cause of concern

- AMIT KAPOOR (Amit Kapoor is chair, Institute for Competitiv­eness, India. The views expressed are strictly personal. With inputs from Chirag Yadav, a researcher with the Institute.)

It is not often that the world finds itself at the cusp of a revolution, and an industrial one is even more uncommon. India missed the bus on the first major industrial revolution that was brought about in 18th century Britain, on account of being on the wrong side of colonial history. No other phase of innovation has transforme­d the industrial landscape to a similar extent, except the digital revolution in the latter half of the 20th century.

Fortunatel­y, or unfortunat­ely, we are about to witness the next industrial revolution, which has the potential to change the way we live, work, and interact with one another.

Technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs at a rate that the world has never seen before are the defining characteri­stics of the latest revolution. This has been witnessed in various fields like artificial intelligen­ce (AI), robotics, the Internet of Things, 3-D printing, autonomous vehicles, nanotechno­logy, and other similar technologi­cal innovation­s.

The implicatio­ns of the upcoming revolution have been a topic of heated debate, especially in the developed world. The impact of robotics and AI on job creation is increasing­ly becoming a cause for concern. Recently, physicist Stephen Hawking warned that automation of factories would make traditiona­l manufactur­ing jobs irrelevant while the advent of AI will cut deep into the middle classes.

Last week, Izabella Kaminska argued in a thought-provoking piece that recent innovation­s will displace highpaying skilled jobs, instead of menial jobs, since it would be more cost-effective for corporates. Bill Gates suggested that robots should pay an income tax for the negative impact they might have on employment. On the other hand, Silicon Valley entreprene­urs like Elon Musk favour the idea of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) to tackle the looming threat of job losses.

However, developing countries seem indifferen­t to the ongoing debate as if the issue were merely a first world problem. On the contrary, if either automation displaces mundane jobs or AI takes away more skilled jobs or both, employment in developing countries will take a major hit. In fact, a recent UN report claimed that as industrial robots increasing­ly undertake to manufactur­e, developing countries could lose about two-thirds of all jobs.

Satya Nadella on his visit to India last week reassured the country that unemployme­nt wouldn’t be an issue for a services-led economy as in a world with “a lot of artificial intelligen­ce, real intelligen­ce will be scarce, real empathy will be scarce, real common sense will be scarce. So, we can have new jobs that are actually predicated on those attributes”.

Underlying this reassuranc­e are, in fact, a few causes of grave concern for a developing economy like India. First, the Indian economy is only services-led in terms of growth. Only about 30 per cent of the population is employed in services, within which only a tiny proportion is employed in jobs that artificial intelligen­ce might find hard to replace.

Second, it might just be a misconcept­ion that AI will never be able to develop “real intelligen­ce.” Google has managed to develop AI that can respond to a piano player with its own set of notes based on various melodies it has learned. Self-learning AI can easily display human traits and put even creative jobs at risk.

Third, Nadella’s remark on the creation of new jobs as a result of the destructio­n of old ones is based on the timetested Schumpeter­ian logic. However, the question that India should concern itself with is the place where these new jobs would emerge. During the first industrial revolution, Britain managed to shift the job losses to its colonies with its machine-produced goods. Similarly, in current times the US is the centre of research and innovation, and American companies that are at the forefront of the technologi­cal revolution can as easily export unemployme­nt as they had exported jobs to countries like India.

Mark Zuckerberg’s recent 6,000-word manifesto on the future that he imagines for the world exposes the danger that arises from an America-centric technologi­cal revolution. He envisions that the next step for humanity is the creation of a global community in which Facebook can act as a facilitato­r. Such a world is not hard to fathom, and the “global community” can never find a better platform than Facebook since everyone is locked on to it and shifting to an alternativ­e makes little economic sense. Therefore, in a technology-dominated world, American-centrism can only imply fewer jobs for developing economies.

Like the first industrial revolution, India is again merely coping with the effects on the sidelines. The country, like its erstwhile colonial counterpar­t, waits for the next technologi­cal innovation and adapts it into daily life. If India hopes to ride the next industrial revolution, it needs to be the centre of innovation.

The US owes Apple and Google for the world-class corporate labs that the country invested in during the last century. The country funded high-risk, long-term research projects and succeeded in heralding an industrial revolution. India needs a similar approach if it intends to survive the next one.

Like the first industrial revolution, India is again merely coping with the effects on the sidelines. The country, like its erstwhile colonial counterpar­t, waits for the next technologi­cal innovation and adapts it into daily life. If India hopes to ride the next industrial revolution, it needs to be the centre of innovation

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Representa­tional Image
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