Oroville Mercury-Register

Do we need humans for that job? Automation booms after COVID

- By Matt O’brien and Paul Wiseman

Ask for a roast beef sandwich at an Arby’s drive-thru east of Los Angeles and you may be talking to Tori — an artificial­ly intelligen­t voice assistant that will take your order and send it to the line cooks.

“It doesn’t call sick,” says Amir Siddiqi, whose family installed the AI voice at its Arby’s franchise this year in Ontario. “It doesn’t get corona. And the reliabilit­y of it is great.”

The pandemic didn’t just threaten Americans’ health when it slammed the U.S. in 2020 — it may also have posed a long-term threat to many of their jobs. Faced with worker shortages and higher labor costs, companies are starting to automate service sector jobs that economists once considered safe, assuming that machines couldn’t easily provide the human contact they believed customers would demand.

Past experience suggests that such automation waves eventually create more jobs than they destroy, but that they also disproport­ionately wipe out less skilled jobs that many low-income workers depend on. Resulting growing pains for the U.S. economy could be severe.

If not for the pandemic, Siddiqi probably wouldn’t have bothered investing in new technology that could alienate existing employees and some customers. But it’s gone smoothly, he says: “Basically, there’s less people needed but those folks are now working in the kitchen and other areas.”

Ideally, automation can redeploy workers into better and more interestin­g work, so long as they can get the appropriat­e technical training, says Johannes Moenius, an economist at the University of Redlands. But although that’s happening now, it’s not moving

quickly enough, he says.

Worse, an entire class of service jobs created when manufactur­ing began to deploy more automation may now be at risk. “The robots escaped the manufactur­ing sector and went into the much larger service sector,” he says. “I regarded contact jobs as safe. I was completely taken by surprise.”

Improvemen­ts in robot technology allow machines to do many tasks that previously required people — tossing pizza dough, transporti­ng hospital linens, inspecting gauges, sorting goods. The pandemic accelerate­d their adoption. Robots, after all, can’t get sick or spread disease. Nor

do they request time off to handle unexpected childcare emergencie­s.

Economists at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund found that past pandemics had encouraged firms to invest in machines in ways that could boost productivi­ty — but also kill low-skill jobs. “Our results suggest that the concerns about the rise of the robots amid the COVID-19 pandemic seem justified,” they wrote in a January paper.

The consequenc­es could fall most heavily on the less-educated women who disproport­ionately occupy the low- and mid-wage jobs most exposed to automation — and to viral infections. Those jobs include salesclerk­s, administra­tive assistants, cashiers and aides in hospitals and those who take care of the sick and elderly.

Employers seem eager to bring on the machines. A survey last year by the nonprofit World Economic Forum found that 43% of companies planned to reduce their workforce as a result of new technology.

Since the second quarter of 2020, business investment in equipment has grown 26%, more than twice as fast as the overall economy.

The fastest growth is expected in the roving machines that clean the floors of supermarke­ts, hospitals and warehouses, according to the Internatio­nal Federation of Robotics, a trade group. The same group also expects an uptick in sales of robots that provide shoppers with informatio­n or deliver room service orders in hotels.

Restaurant­s have been among the most visible robot adopters. In late August, for instance, the salad chain Sweetgreen announced it was buying kitchen robotics startup Spyce, which makes a machine that cooks up vegetables and grains and spouts them into bowls.

It’s not just robots, either — software and AI-powered services are on the rise as well. Starbucks has been automating the behindthe-scenes work of keeping track of a store’s inventory. More stores have moved to self-checkout.

“It doesn’t call sick. It doesn’t get corona. And the reliabilit­y of it is great.” — Amir Siddiqi, San Bernadino County

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A diner at Bartaco uses their app to order an item off the menu, at the restaurant in Arlington, Va. The restaurant is using an automated app for ordering and payments. Instead of servers they use “food runners” to get the food to the tables.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A diner at Bartaco uses their app to order an item off the menu, at the restaurant in Arlington, Va. The restaurant is using an automated app for ordering and payments. Instead of servers they use “food runners” to get the food to the tables.

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