Will robots take your job?

The Associated Press
Matt O’Brien

Robots aren’t replacing everyone but a quarter of U.S. jobs will be severely disrupted as artificial intelligence accelerates the automation of existing work, according to a new Brookings Institution report.
Thursday’s report from the Washington think-tank says roughly 36 million Americans hold jobs with “high exposure” to automation–meaning at least 70 percent of their tasks soon could be performed by machines using current technology.
Among those most likely to be affected are cooks, waiters, and others in food services, short-haul truck drivers, and clerical office workers.
“That population is going to need to upskill, reskill, or change jobs fast,” said Mark Muro, a senior fellow at Brookings and lead author of the report.
Muro said the timeline for the changes could be “a few years or it could be two decades” but added it’s likely that automation will happen more swiftly during the next economic downturn.
Businesses typically are eager to implement cost-cutting technology as they lay off workers.
Although the United States is in the middle of its second-longest expansion in history, and jobs data suggest the economy remains healthy, many business leaders and economists have suggested in surveys that the country could slip into a recession in 2020.
In addition, the partial government shutdown has been creating anxieties about a downturn.
Some economic studies have found that similar shifts toward automating production happened in the early part of previous recessions–and may have contributed to the “jobless recovery” that followed the 2008 financial crisis.
But with new advances in artificial intelligence, it’s not just industrial and warehouse robots that will alter the American workforce. Self-checkout kiosks and computerized hotel concierges will do their part.
Most jobs will change somewhat as machines take over routine tasks but a majority of U.S. workers will be able to adapt to that shift without being displaced.
Some chain restaurants already have shifted to self-ordering machines while a handful have experimented with robot-assisted kitchens.
Google this year is piloting the use of its digital voice assistant at hotel lobbies to instantly interpret conversations across a few dozen languages. Autonomous vehicles could replace short-haul delivery drivers.
Walmart and other retailers, meanwhile, are preparing to open cashier-less stores powered by in-store sensors or cameras with facial recognition technology.
The changes also will disproportionately affect the younger workers who dominate food services and other industries at highest risk for automation.
“Restaurants will be able to get along with significantly reduced workforces,” Muro noted. “In the hotel industry, instead of five people manning a desk to greet people, there’s one and people basically serve themselves.”
Many economists find that automation has an overall positive effect on the labour market, said Matias Cortes, an assistant professor at York University in Toronto who was not involved with the Brookings report.
It can create economic growth, reduce prices, and increase demand while also creating new jobs that make up for those that disappear.
But Cortes said there’s no doubt there are “clear winners and losers.”
In the recent past, those hardest hit were men with low levels of education who dominated manufacturing and other blue-collar jobs, and women with intermediate levels of education who dominated clerical and administrative positions.
In the future, the class of workers affected by automation could grow as machines become more intelligent. The Brookings report analyzed each occupation’s automation potential based on research by the McKinsey management consulting firm.
Those jobs that remain largely unscathed will be those requiring not just advanced education, but also interpersonal skills and emotional intelligence.