The Palm Beach Post

Report: U.S. behind other nations in robot readiness

- By Danielle Paquette Washington Post

The United States lags behind other countries in readiness for an increasing­ly automated world, placing ninth on a ranking of 25 advanced economies, according to a new report from Swiss technology giant ABB.

South Korea, Singapore, Germany and Canada are better prepared for the rise of machines, thanks largely to their education systems and labor policies, the authors of the Automation Readiness Index concluded.

Researcher­s graded the nations on three main categories: their innovation environmen­t, which included money spent on research and developmen­t; school policies, from early curriculum­s to lifelong learning programs, and public workforce developmen­t, such as government-led efforts to retrain workers.

No country is “genuinely ready” for the technologi­cal shift that is expected to displace millions of workers worldwide in the next three decades, they found — but the United States is especially underprepa­red for the jobs of the future.

Guido Jouret, ABB’s chief digital officer, singled out the U.S. educationa­l system, which pushes students toward two or four-year degrees. Colleges tend to be less nimble when it comes to keeping up with technologi­cal changes, and companies will seek workers who can adapt to cutting-edge developmen­ts.

Germany, in contrast, encourages technical training, which is generally more reactive to immediate employer needs. Sixty percent of young adults in the country train as apprentice­s in manufactur­ing, IT, banking, constructi­on and other fields, compared with 5 percent of Americans.

“We lack this vocational training track,” said Jouret, who works in San Francisco.

Susan Lund, a labor economist at the global consulting firm McKinsey, said U.S. students tend to feel more pressure to take the university route, even if it’s outside their budget.

“Not everyone needs a four-year college degree,” she said. “We could do a lot to build more career pathways. Even just skill-credential­ing to enable people to get a basic, entry-level job.”

In China, meanwhile, the government is updating public education to prioritize creativity, rather than acing standardiz­ed tests. One 2015 public policy experiment in Shanghai gave students another chance to take a college admission exam, which was meant to curb stress and reduce the focus on memorizati­on.

“They are considerin­g relaxing exam pressure,” Harry Patrinos, practice manager for education, East Asia and Pacific at the World Bank, is quoted as saying in the ABB report.

Economists say such efforts are aimed at training children and young adults to value independen­t thinking over regurgitat­ion — a trait robots can’t yet replicate.

“Take the Southwest Airlines pilot — she did a phenomenal job landing that plane,” Jouret said, referencin­g an engine explosion that grabbed internatio­nal attention earlier this month. “This is the thing we need people to be good at: How to cope with the unexpected.”

U.S. leaders have vowed to prepare workers for the next industrial revolution, lauding the merits of apprentice­ships, without expanding funding for them.

But economists say the nation would benefit from more creative solutions to what future jobs will demand: continuous learning.

One example comes from Singapore, which ranks second on the readiness index. In 2016, the Asian nation gave its citizens cash in “individual learning accounts,” which they may tap to cover job training courses at any stage in their careers.

The United States scores higher on research-and-developmen­t spending, the dollars that fund the next advancemen­ts. The country devotes 2.79 percent of gross domestic product to the effort.

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE / BLOOMBERG ?? Robotic arms weld sections together on a Vauxhall Vivaro medium sized van in the bodyshop at the Vauxhall plant in Luton, United Kingdom.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE / BLOOMBERG Robotic arms weld sections together on a Vauxhall Vivaro medium sized van in the bodyshop at the Vauxhall plant in Luton, United Kingdom.

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