Calgary Herald

Federal experts believe doomsday scenario of mass layoffs due to AI, robots not likely

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA Newly released documents show that top government officials believe there is no imminent threat that artificial intelligen­ce and robots will displace large segments of the Canadian workforce.

In work done last year, federal experts found the likelihood of a “doomsday” scenario where automation eliminates half of Canadian jobs to be “overstated.”

But officials warned there were early indication­s of challenges in parts of the economy that the government should do something about, such as the way online streaming services are reshaping music, television and movie production.

In a separate briefing, officials were told ahead of summer that 11 per cent of jobs in Canada could be automated over the next 15 to 20 years, and a further 29 per cent are “likely to change significan­tly.”

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the briefing summary, as well as May and June drafts of the report, through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The report was to be used as the foundation for advice to the victor of the fall federal election on how to help workers at the dawn of a new decade.

The work was part of a series of exercises officials have run to see how well “social safety net” programs respond to the most dire of potential outcomes caused by technologi­cal shifts in the workforce.

It’s unclear how well federal programs fared.

Those details, like many others in the documents, have been blacked out or not released because they are considered advice for government.

Federal officials have forecast where the impacts of automation are likely to be felt most, such as rural towns reliant on manufactur­ing, according to documents previously obtained by The Canadian Press in March. Those documents, alluded to in the June report, also listed the towns most and least likely to feel the impacts in each province.

But exactly where effects are felt and how fast they arrive remains a guessing game.

For instance, the federal documents say some tasks, such as copy editing and data entry, could be outsourced overseas to low-cost workers through online platforms. Three-dimensiona­l printing, on the other hand, could bring back manufactur­ing jobs.

Officials also wrote that other trends not measured in the report will shape the future of work, such as the transition to a low-carbon economy and increasing numbers of LGBTQ2 workers.

Some policy responses will come into effect with the turn of the calendar to 2020, including the launch of a $250-a-year benefit for workers to be put toward training, and a matching leave underwritt­en by employment insurance.

That work will be overseen by Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough, who has been given responsibi­lity for skills training and the EI system.

Officials advising Qualtrough have heard that many adults lack “soft skills and basic digital skills” needed for success in the future, according to a summary of a May presentati­on to deputy ministers — the top federal bureaucrat­s — by an official from the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t.

A recent report by the Brookfield Institute came to a similar conclusion, and recommende­d government­s create “a wide variety of accessible programmin­g designed to teach Canadians general workforce digital skills ... along with general soft skills.”

Meanwhile, Labour Minister Filomena Tassi is tasked with updating the federal labour code, including increasing the federal minimum wage to at least $15 an hour, and additional protection­s for “platform workers,” such as Uber drivers.

Several of the details in Tassi’s mandate letter reflect recommenda­tions of a blue-ribbon panel of experts.

The panel also recommende­d the government look at models of collective representa­tion for non-unionized workers, and rules to compensate workers who stay connected by email to the office after work hours.

Sunil Johal, chair of the panel, said a key message from the report is that labour rules and regulation­s need to be frequently reviewed as more shifts are felt in the workforce.

He said there is also a need to make regulation­s more nimble. That might mean creating what Johal described as “outcomes-based regulation­s” to address shifts in the labour market to spell out what the government expects but allow businesses to determine the means to that end.

“If we take as a given that the world of work and the labour market is going to be shifting and adapting more quickly than ever as we move forward, then we absolutely need to move to regulatory legislativ­e approaches that move just as quickly,” Johal said. “When there’s a decades-long lag, that’s where you’re going to have huge issues that ... put labour standards at risk of falling just so far out of step that it’s completely unacceptab­le.”

In a statement accompanyi­ng the release of the panel’s report in December, Tassi said the government would “consider the excellent work done by the panel” in making changes to federal labour rules. The Canadian Press

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Robots weld the bed of Ford F Series trucks on the assembly line in Dearborn, Mich. While top government officials aren’t worried about automation’s threat in the near term, they warn the government should address the impact of online streaming services.
CARLOS OSORIO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Robots weld the bed of Ford F Series trucks on the assembly line in Dearborn, Mich. While top government officials aren’t worried about automation’s threat in the near term, they warn the government should address the impact of online streaming services.

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