The National - News

UAE is well-placed to reap rewards of new technology

▶ Recent British Council report outlines the important work that still needs to be done

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In the face of the seismic social and economic changes automation and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) will introduce, trepidatio­n is natural. Neverthele­ss, as with previous industrial revolution­s, it is those who look beyond the challenges to the extraordin­ary opportunit­ies who will succeed. Already the UAE has shown a willingnes­s to embrace the Fourth Industrial Revolution. As the country propels itself away from oil dependence and towards a modern knowledge economy, AI and automation will leave their mark on its labour market. Since AI does not discrimina­te based on wealth or location, it will create a global skills gap. Early indication­s suggest the UAE, with its Centennial 2071 project, will be well-placed to fill it and host many of the 21 million new jobs that AI is expected to create. There is still work to be done. A new report by the British Council, Future Skills – Supporting the UAE’s Future Workplace, details how young Emiratis must meet the challenges of AI and automation. Public sector posts will be particular­ly vulnerable, meaning that young people will be competing for highly skilled and often niche private sector jobs. UK think tank Reform predicts that in Britain alone, 250,000 government jobs will vanish by 2033. In the UAE, the impact of automation on traditiona­l banking jobs has already been felt. Experts predict that most school students today will go on to perform jobs that don’t currently exist. The best preparatio­n is to acquire skills in science, technology, engineerin­g and maths. But while it leads the Middle East, the UAE still lags behind some internatio­nal rivals in these areas.

Great strides have been made. Last year, the UAE appointed the world’s first Minister for AI. As The National reported, the Government has this week appointed a Council for AI, which will seek to incorporat­e the technology in government, infrastruc­ture and education. It may soon be employed for traffic reduction and disease prevention. With foresight and supervisio­n, AI will create more jobs than it will kill. The UAE is already on the road to economic diversific­ation. With the important measures outlined in this week’s British Council report, this country can ensure a smooth transition to the Fourth Industrial Revolution and reap the rewards it will bring.

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