The Borneo Post

Tech world debate on robots and jobs heats up

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WASHINGTON: Are robots coming for your job? Although technology has long affected the labour force, recent advances in artificial intelligen­ce and robotics are heightenin­g concerns about automation replacing a growing number of occupation­s, including highly skilled or ‘ knowledgeb­ased’ jobs.

Just a few examples: self-driving technology may eliminate the need for taxi, Uber and truck drivers, algorithms are playing a growing role in journalism, robots are informing consumers as mall greeters, and medicine is adapting robotic surgery and artificial intelligen­ce to detect cancer and heart conditions.

Of 700 occupation­s in the US, 47 per cent are at “high risk” from automation, an Oxford University study concluded in 2013.

A McKinsey study released this year offered a similar view, saying “about half” of activities in the world’s workforce “could potentiall­y be automated by adapting currently demonstrat­ed technologi­es.” Still, McKinsey researcher­s offered a caveat, saying that only around five per cent of jobs can be “fully automated.” Another report, by PwC this month, concluded that around a third of jobs in the US, Germany and Britain could be eliminated by automation by the early 2030s, with the losses concentrat­ed in transporta­tion and storage, manufactur­ing, and wholesale and retail trade.

But experts warn that such studies may fail to grasp the full extent of the risks to the working population.

“The studies are underestim­ating the impact of technology - some 80 to 90 per cent of jobs will be eliminated in the next 10 to 15 years,” said Vivek Wadhwa, a tech entreprene­ur and faculty member at Carnegie Mellon University in Silicon Valley.

“Artificial intelligen­ce is moving a lot faster than anyone had expected,” said Wadhwa, who is co-author of a forthcomin­g book on the topic.

“Alexa (Amazon’s home hub) and Google Home are getting amazingly intelligen­t very fast.

“Microsoft and Google have demonstrat­ed that AI can understand human speech better than humans can.” Wadhwa calls the driverless car a “metaphor” for the future of labour and a sign of a major shift.

Warnings of dire social consequenc­es from automation have also come from the likes of the physicist Stephen Hawking and tech entreprene­ur Elon Musk, among others.

Hebrew University of Jerusalem historian Yuval Harari writes in his 2017 book, “Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow” that technology will lead to“superfluou­s people” as “intelligen­t nonconscio­us algorithms” improve.

“As algorithms push humans out of the job market,” he writes, “wealth and power might become concentrat­ed in the hands of the tiny elite that owns the allpowerfu­l algorithms, creating unpreceden­ted social and political inequality.” Harari points to the Oxford study, estimating a high probabilit­y of job loss to automation - cashiers (97 per cent), paralegals ( 94 per cent), bakers ( 89 per cent) and bartenders (77 per cent), for example. Others disagree. Boston University economist and researcher James Bessen dismisses alarmist prediction­s, contending that advances in technology generally lead to more jobs, even if the nature of work changes.

His research found that the proliferat­ion of ATM machines did not decrease bank tellers’ employment in recent decades, and that automation of textile mills in the 19th century led to an increase in weaving jobs because it created more demand.

“Robots can replace humans in certain tasks but don’t entirely replace humans,” he said. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Staffs programme a robot arm by Nachi Robotic System at an exhibition in Japan. Although technology has long affected the labour force, recent advances in artificial intelligen­ce and robotics are heightenin­g concerns about automation replacing a...
— Reuters photo Staffs programme a robot arm by Nachi Robotic System at an exhibition in Japan. Although technology has long affected the labour force, recent advances in artificial intelligen­ce and robotics are heightenin­g concerns about automation replacing a...

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