Sunday Mirror

WELCOME TO THE MACHINE

Unions warn of wave of sackings as firms rush to automate

- BY chRismclau­ghlin

A surge in robots replacing h man workers is e pected in theu a e o xv u w k f the c o r o na ir s crisis.

Firms have already started speeding up automation and more are planning to use machines rather than people to climb out of the economic collapse.

One company executive described Covid-19 as “a time to automate and take labour out of the equation”.

A survey of company bosses shows two-thirds of employers have speeded up automation or are re-writing plans because of the epidemic.

The Unite union has warned hundreds of thousands of jobs could be lost in a “wave of permanent cuts”.

An Oxford University study before the epidemic had already predicted 35 per cent of all UK jobs, from office workers to nursing and constructi­on, were at risk from automation over the next 20 years.

Union executive officer Sharon Graham said: “We are at a turning point. When the public money stops and economic recovery takes centre stage, we will face a test of how automation is used.

“Some employers are speeding up

THINGS were looking up in Italy yesterday as the awesome Air Force aerobatics team, the Frecce Tricolori, flew over Rome to mark Liberation Day and adorned the sky in the country’s colours.

The national holiday celebrates the end of Nazi occupation in Italy during World War ll, which came two weeks before the end of the conflict on VE Day. plans to close sites or introduce new technology to save labour costs by replacing humans with robots.”

The warning follows a survey by global accountanc­y firm EY, formerly Ernst & Young, which found that 36 per cent of companies have already speeded up the shift to robots in reaction to the crisis and 41 per cent were looking to “re-evaluate” possibilit­ies.

The union has called for “negotiated

solutions” to integrate robots with human workers and save jobs.

A spokesman said: “Before the crisis it was estimated that artificial intelligen­ce could add £232billion to the economy. So employers have the ability to share the benefits of automation with workers.”

However Jonathan Gilliam, an economist at PwC, said: “While we expect the nature of jobs will change and some will be susceptibl­e to automation, our research shows that the boost to the UK will also generate significan­t job gains.” chris.mclaughlin@

reachplc.com

When the public money stops and economic recovery takes centre stage, we’ll face a test SHARON GRAHAM EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE UNITE UNION

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