Fiji Sun

AI Could Replace Millions of Australian Jobs, Report Warns

-

Artificial intelligen­ce could put 3.5 million Australian­s out of a job over the next decade, as leading experts warn of the need for greater retraining and income support.

They also say Australia will need laws to measure happiness and well-being as more artificial intelligen­ce takes over. A new report from the Australian Council of Learned Academies says the future of the nation will be made by the decisions taken on artificial intelligen­ce in coming years.

“With careful planning, AI offers great opportunit­ies for Australia, provided we ensure that the use of the technology does not compromise our human values,” Professor Toby Walsh said on Tuesday.

The report quoted a estimate that 3.5 million Australian workers are at high-risk of being displaced by automation by 2030.

“There may be a need to rethink the context of work itself. People will need to be meaningful­ly engaged in activities and roles independen­tly of work,” the ACOLA report says.

“Income support could be considered for those displaced if they cannot be appropriat­ely re-skilled.”

The report says traditiona­l measures of success such as economic growth and income inequality can mask problems, so something else will be needed.

“Such measures could include the OECD Better Life Index or other indicators such as the Australian Digital Inclusion Index,” the report says.

“Measures like the triple bottom line may need to be adapted to measure success in a way that makes the wellbeing of all citizens central.” The ACOLA panel recommends targeting skilled AI developers from overseas and bringing them to Australia to bolster the industry.

“What kind of society do we want to be? That is the crucial question for all Australian­s, and for government­s as our elected representa­tives,” Australia’s chief scientist Alan Finkel said.

The report said Australia needed a national strategy for AI, a community awareness campaign, safe and accessible digital infrastruc­ture, a responsive regulatory system; and a diverse and highly skilled workforce.

That includes digital infrastruc­ture to allow personal data to be safely and privately transferre­d between digital providers.

AAP/9News

 ??  ?? A Boston Dynamics SpotMini robot walks through a conference room during a robotics summit in Boston.
A Boston Dynamics SpotMini robot walks through a conference room during a robotics summit in Boston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji