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MICROSOFT TO CREATE 55,000 UAE JOBS AS AI BEGINS TO TRANSFORM THE WORLD

▶ Cloud services will be the biggest growth area, with training offered to improve skills, say experts at Gitex

- NICK WEBSTER

Recent research suggests tech giant Microsoft could create 55,000 new UAE jobs over the next five years, as digital devices and cloud computing play a bigger part in our lives.

As automation and the Internet of Things become ever-present in modern life, technology experts speaking at Dubai’s Gitex Technology Week also predicted a bright future for young people hoping for a career in the industry.

A report by the Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n also forecast a need for 520,000 tech-related jobs in important markets across the region over the next five years.

Spending in the UAE on cloud computing services – where data is saved and shared over the internet remotely – is expected to quadruple in that time, reaching Dh1.5 billion.

“There has been a big change in the economy, driven by technology and the way we work, learn and communicat­e,” said Jaime Galviz, Microsoft chief operating officer for the Middle East and Africa.

“People are concerned about what will happen with their jobs in the near future as well as their privacy and security online. There will be enormous disruption through automation, so people will need to develop new skills to adapt to a changing environmen­t.

“These jobs will be created to work within a system of intelligen­ce. More jobs will be created to promote efficiency through machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce.”

According to the IDC report, the use of public cloud services and investment­s in private and business cloud services will help organisati­ons in the UAE to innovate, grow and develop.

Cloud services will make nearly Dh20 billion in net new revenue by 2022, the report said.

New jobs with Microsoft, and other businesses that rely on its services, will be created for data analysts, coders and technician­s to support automation.

Ethics, privacy and security of data will be another area of big growth for new jobs.

Education is rapidly evolving to keep up with the anticipate­d demand for these specific roles in the technology sector.

Microsoft has developed an online academy to train graduates who may wish to make themselves more employable in the near future through its Cloud Society.

People who sign up can learn new Microsoft-accredited skills to work in cloud-related industries.

About 120,000 people in the region are already engaged in this online learning portal.

“The UAE has been identified as having a shortage of coders and skilled engineers to work in government sectors so a learning path has been developed to specifical­ly to fill this gap,” Mr Galviz said.

“Children are already learning basic skills by playing games like Minecraft, where they learn problem-solving skills and how to work in a team remotely.

“We envisage these to be key components of future employment.”

A report from the World Bank on the growth of the technology sector, automation and artificial intelligen­ce estimates that for every new job created, four related posts will be needed as a result.

“Managing change will be the biggest challenge we will face in utilising the developing technology that we will find in the future design of modern cities,” said Nawaf Al Sahhaf – chief executive of Badir, a technology incubator in Saudi Arabia – at a Gitex forum on the future of emerging technologi­es.

“If there are a million lorry drivers around the world who rely on that industry, if automation takes over in the transport sector then those people will need an alternativ­e source of employment.

“Inevitably new jobs will come, but it will take time to manage that transition towards automation that will be a key factor in the developmen­t of modern cities.”

The Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n forecast a need for an additional 520,000 tech-related jobs across the region

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 ?? Reem Mohammed / The National ?? Above, visitors to Gitex Technology Week in Dubai mix commerce with fun. Reports from internatio­nal organisati­ons predict a bright future for young people in the tech sector as the digital world plays an ever bigger role in our lives
Reem Mohammed / The National Above, visitors to Gitex Technology Week in Dubai mix commerce with fun. Reports from internatio­nal organisati­ons predict a bright future for young people in the tech sector as the digital world plays an ever bigger role in our lives
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