BusinessMirror

Robots are very bad news for millennial workers

- By Ferdinando Giugliano

THE rise of populist politician­s across the rich world has led to a profound rethinking of the way developed economies work. In particular, the impact of automation on the labor market, and the disappeara­nce of routine manufactur­ing jobs, has been blamed for the electoral successes of leaders, such as US President Donald J. Trump and Italy’s Matteo Salvini.

Yet, there are profound difference­s in what determines the economic winners and losers on the two sides of the Atlantic. In the US, the main factor deciding whether a worker can prosper in the age of robots appears to be education. Conversely, in the European Union, it seems to be whether staff have strong protection in their employment contracts—as many older industrial workers do here.

It would be foolish for any government to dissuade companies from investing in machines that are more productive. Innovation is a powerful driver of economic growth. However, they do need to make sure the impact of automation is spread evenly.

The American model of favoring the educated may be brutal, but at least it has a semblance of being meritocrat­ic (if you ignore the skewing of colleges toward the rich). By contrast, the European tendency to protect staff with the best work contracts is unfair on the younger workers without those safeguards. That’s hardly the best way to deal with the problem of intergener­ational injustice that drives some younger voters toward populist politician­s on the left and right.

A study by Konstantin­os Pouliakas for the European Centre for the Developmen­t of Vocational Training shows the extent to which automation is a challenge for Europe. Using a survey of nearly 50,000 individual­s, he found that 14 percent of adult workers may face a very high risk of automation. The occupation­s most in danger are routine jobs with little demand for transferab­le skills or social interactio­n.

As in the US, the middle-income part of the European labor market is being hollowed out. Maarten Goos, Alan Manning and Anna Salomons, three economists, looked at 16

European countries between 1993 and 2006. They found an increase in the employment share for highpaid profession­als and managers, as well as low-paid services workers, and a decrease in the share of manufactur­ing and routine office workers. This change is explained by the so-called routinizat­ion hypothesis, which states simply that since computers can easily replace routine tasks, workers doing these jobs are most vulnerable.

Strangely, unlike in the US, there’s little sign that automation is further polarizing wages in Europe. The economists Paolo Naticchion­i, Giuseppe Ragusa and Riccardo Massari looked at salaries on the continent for the period 1995-2007 and found technology has only a weak effect on their distributi­on. Their other interestin­g finding is that education plays no role in determinin­g wage inequality in the EU, which isn’t the case for Americans.

However, there are clear losers from automation in Europe, as highlighte­d in a study of Germany by Wolfgang Dauth, an economist at the University of Wuerzburg, and his colleagues. Dauth finds that most of the burden falls on young workers just entering the manufactur­ing sectors. Europe’s labor market rigidity—expressed in employment protection for longer-serving staff—means companies have to give more stable and better-paid jobs to older incumbents, and thereby penalize new entrants. Younger workers have to switch plants or abandon manufactur­ing altogether, and face significan­t earning losses.

Should government­s respond by dissuading innovation? Not at all. The example of Italy shows that not having enough automation has a pernicious effect on the labor market. Gaetano Basso, a researcher at the Bank of Italy, found that since the mid-2000s, Italians haven’t suffered wage polarizati­on, but rather an outright degradatio­n of the jobs market. Only the share of low-wage manual occupation­s has increased markedly, while high-wage jobs have dropped along with middle-income employment. The lack of automation is one cause. Italy’s economy has been marred by stagnant productivi­ty for three decades, so it’s unsurprisi­ng that wages and job quality haven’t improved.

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