One In Three Jobs Will Be Taken By Software Or Robots By 2025, Says Gartner
dcblogs writes: "Gartner predicts one in three jobs will be converted to software, robots and smart machines by 2025," said Peter Sondergaard, Gartner's research director at its big Orlando conference. "New digital businesses require less labor; machines will make sense of data faster than humans can," he said. Smart machines are an emerging "super class" of technologies that perform a wide variety of work, both the physical and the intellectual kind. Machines, for instance, have been grading multiple choice test for years, but now they are grading essays and unstructured text. This cognitive capability in software will extend to other areas, including financial analysis, medical diagnostics and data analytic jobs of all sorts, says Gartner. "Knowledge work will be automated."
Sure sure, I've been hearing about the leisure society since the 1970s when I was a kid. I believed it too. Turns out that the people in charge in this world have serious issues with other people working less than them...
We'll find even more creative ways to distract ourselves with ever more bureaucracy in public and private affairs. Everyone I worked with 15 years ago as an engineer is now in management. What are they managing? Where is this productivity I keep hearing about?
I want a ten hour workweek. I want to be able to have the same lifestyle as my parents had 40 years ago with one income!
Unless we trust in the kind intentions of our politicians and business owners, I see a dystopian nightmare in the works. We already have the capability to feed, house, and clothe everyone on the planet and look at how many people do without their basic needs being met.
I, for one, welcome our new software or robot overlords
Sexy Robots!
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Our Supreme Emperor Watson the Third will rule the world and all politicians are deported to Mars.
How much of a vested interest does Gartner have in this technology? My guess is a lot, it's 2003 all over again. In 2003 Gartner predicted that within the next 10 years over 50% of IT jobs would be sent overseas, and by the way we also happen to have an offshore IT consulting service, what a coincidence, totally unrelated to our over exaggerated findings, really!
Monstar L
With voice recognition still doing well at 95% accuracy when trained (an average of one in twenty words wrong? Sign me up!) - which was about what it was back a decade ago - and the essay grading systems being very good at what they do (Sarcasm alert), they'll have to improve things a lot faster than they have been for the machines to take over 'knowledge work'.
@Whee
...would be running on more computers than all other operating systems combined by, IIRC, 2003.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
.. THe forecasting done by Gartner research.
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
... we can't protect the fucking automation we have in place now.
Broken stuff, over time, just gets broker.
Hackers are invading the machines as we speak and THAT'S the front page news ... not this science fiction crap.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
If automation doesn't kill at least 50% by 2025 I'll have my robot eat its hat.
What hasn't happened yet is the creation of the IBM PC of robots. There have been a few cracks at it such as the PR2 but I see that as more of a Sinclair than PC. I want a whitebox robot that I can then glue bits on through a PCI type interface equivalent and make it a factory robot, a hospital robot, or an agricultural robot. For instance I was looking at a machine that was making pretzels and someone had called it a robot. I would have called it a slightly adaptable pretzel making machine.
I have two rules of thumb for what I call a robot: One is that it adapts to its environment somewhat; for instance a garbage picking up machine that looked for garbage, picked up garbage, and did other things such as bringing back a full load and dumping it would meet rule one. Rule two(the lesser rule) is that at the core of the machine can be adapted to something else. So the garbage picking up robot could have some bits switched and it could be a mowing robot or a snow removal robot. I am not saying that the actual garbage robot would be swapable, but that the factory that makes them would be at least adapting a central common core.
So a roomba very much meets rule one but is mostly failing on rule two.
And my rules also apply to software that eliminates a job. I suspect that the software that replaces a call center worker will end up being related to the software that replaces a medical doctor on diagnoses. So adapts to is limited environment, and has a common core.
But when robot designers are working with tools that meet both of my rules then the robot revolution will take off and the job losses will be astronomical. Basically any fairly repetitive job that follows a simple set of logical rules is doomed. This describes many many jobs ranging from building cleaners to medical doctors. Oddly enough some lower skilled jobs will require humans for a very long time. Car repair would be a good example. Often when a car breaks in some way things can be disrupted. So that a simple repetitive routine won't work. Things need to be pounded, pried, and even torched to even get things apart. But computers will assist with such a job by helping to diagnose. If robots are going to damage the car repair profession at all it will be by the robotic assembly of cars resulting in more reliable cars and fewer accidents by robotically driven cars.
"Machines, for instance, have been grading multiple choice for years, but now they are grading essays and unstructured text."
These are incredibly easy to game. They aren't looking at the actual content of an essay (because we don't have software that can comprehend meaning), they are just looking for certain patterns - word choices, sentence length, related words in sentences, etc. Using automated grading as a an example of advanced software is a poor example, because the software just isn't there yet.
And we have robots and software that could be doing a huge number of jobs these days. Why is even a single human being employed at a McDonalds? What can they do that a robot can't? The answer is - human labour is still much cheaper than robotic automation.
This is even more dubious than the endless stream of climate change nonsense that gets posted here.
Can we have a "peak oil" section on /. so we can filter this crap out? Maybe add in a "omg Tesla!" section too?
There is not enough available engineer/it/programmers to deploy (let alone create) systems to replace 1/3 of all jobs in 10 years.
Or do they mean 1 in 3 remaining jobs?
As it is, automation has already taken the vast majority of jobs. You can run a small store with just a few employees, something that needed a couple dozen just a century ago.
Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
Does anyone seriously pay any attention to *anything* that Gartner says? Just another meaningless, unquantifiable, almost certainly false prediction based on no actual evidence or substance.
Everything Gartner says is just buzzwords and bullshit.
(I vaguely recall a few years ago hearing a Gartner prediction that "80% of CIOs are going to focus on technology this year" - well thank you, Captain Obvious, but it makes you wonder what the other 20% are doing....)
I'm a machinist and have worked with CNC machines and computers since 1978, just about the time all the so called "smart people" said it was going to be a "service economy", that really happened too, right? Now I teach students to run manual machinery and demand for them is very high. Complete and utter crap is what I say.
Remove the human element and it is the beginning of the end.
Take away the influence of human judgment and you might as well not bother.
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There are a lot of comments here about how this is futurist doom & gloom. And it certainly could be. But the difference between the doom of the past and the doom of now is that we now have working, commercial examples of the robots that could replace humans. It was theory before... now it's just a matter of economy of scale and refinement.
CGP Gray did an excellent piece on this already.
"I will trust Google to 'do no evil' until the founders no longer run it." Hello Alphabet.
We already have the capability to feed, house, and clothe everyone on the planet and look at how many people do without their basic needs being met.
I tend to disagree. We are capable of producing the food, clothing, and everything necessary for housing, but we are not able to transport them where they are needed. A large part of the problem lies in the fact that the target countries have despotic government or are in war, but plain movement of such large amounts of material is also nontrivial and energetically demanding.
That’s right in 11 years I see smartphones running and splicing fiber optic cables, performing neurosurgery, pulling calves, the working man is done. Are these the same idiots who built a futuristic model of a computer with a steering wheel? Every change changes the support jobs. So taxi drivers are replaced, but someone needs to maintain the millions of systems that operate in and around the autonomous vehicles, new factories will build these systems for mass production, and sales men will get commission of their implementation.
Grocery stores rarely have any traditional checkout counters open - vast swaths of desolation leading to a line or two and banks of automated checkouts. Fast food is already being automated in post proof-of-concept manners in places like Japan. Text to speech has replaced voice talent for recording on IVR systems. Voice recognition has advanced in leaps and bounds over the course of a mere couple of years.
The wind is blowing - as it always has - to the reduction of the cost of human labor. If you want to be a dumbass, go ahead and spit into the wind, but it's going to end up in your eye.
We used to be a nation of 90% farmers. Now we have less than 10% employed farming, 80% were replaced with robots. The article should have been 1 on 3 of the remaining jobs will be replaced.
If you divide the economy properly, the statistic makes sense. Pretty much all of the grunt work for the rich will be done by robots by 2025. Almost none of the grunt work for the grunts will be done by robots by then. The real question is at what point will the grunts start eating the rich.
If it's true, then bye-bye US. We don't have a populace or society that could withstand 33%+ unemployment. On the other hand, it is Gartner predicting this, so I'm hoping it won't actually be that bad (though this may be the one Gartner gets right).
That is all.
We're testing software that will eventually replace my job, and from the looks of things it will take far more than eleven years before the software is ready.
Average, that is, or approaching it.
Ever notice how more and more of the unemployed are unable to re-enter the workforce, and college grads are giving up and moving home? Humans can be worked for 40 hours without undue complaining given a large enough reward (flat screen TVs and SUVs), so that's how long the working humans will go. That leaves more and more people in the 0 hour/week class.
In the US, there are (roughly) 330 million people, and around 120 million of them are employed full time. In a gross simplification, we're already down to an average of a 15 hour work week. If we convert one in three current full time jobs to computers, and presume that the general employment ratio trend were to remain constant without that, that would put us a (surprise) an average of 10 hours per week per person.
So, remember that as you work your 40 hour week that there will be 3 unemployed people who are balancing out that equation. (And before the far right chimes in, statistically 2 of those 3 loafers will be in your own family, though there certainly will be a (bigger) class battle on the horizon if the unemployable start living it up too well)
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
We can only dream...
Let them take Gartner as well!
Various steady state economists seem to have thought this through pretty well. There's the notion of a citizen's income and so on. Highly recommend the books by Herman E. Daly, or the site at www.steadystate.org
Man no longer need die in space!
Gosh, you know this prediction just brings to mind a world like that of Paranoia, where we've happily given over our lives to the computers to manage and run for us. Hmm. Can't decide if this is a good or bad thing.
it's up to 50 in the United States. Most houses are 2 income and 66% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. Real Wages stopped growing in 1979.
Just because something took 20 years longer to happen than we expected doesn't mean it's not going to happen. The one's that are making it happen are the ones with the most to gain, the folks at the top. They take a much, much longer view than you or I. They're not just thinking about leaving the kiddos a house or two, they're thinking about a legacy.
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We've been swinging far right for 30 years. Ever since the right wing figured out the "Southern Strategy". And up until some very liberal reforms mostly put through when a few members of the ruling class turned on each other (FDR mostly) we've had mass starvation and poverty just like everywhere else. We have a lot more farm land and less drought, so we had a little bit less. But we also had slavery until the 1800s.
:(
Also the countries with Starvation aren't even vaguely liberal or socialistic. They just fascist dictatorships that happen to borrow Marx's writing for Rhetoric. Look at real liberal countries. Countries that didn't go the Reagan/Thatcher route. Germany, Netherlands, Canada even France is doing better. Now watch Canada following in America's footsteps and go down the drain for everyone but the top 1% too...
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Seems like we are headed into one of these two directions...
Give companies huge tax breaks based on the the median income of their employees * total employees.
At some point our tax structure needs to reflect encouraging businesses to hire people. Currently we just keep attaching more expenses to each person and go out of our way to make businesses want to hire less people.
Why is this such a foreign concept?
Gartner will be replacing by monkeys writing in computer keyboards, may they write less bullshit. And perhaps some more smart ones. And things from the real future and not present things or trends dressed as the future. And as hot bodies, they work for peanuts, you know.
Japan's computer-generated grassroots indie pop phenomenon Hatsune Miku makes her US TV debut Wednesday on the David Letterman show.
http://sgcafe.com/2014/09/hats...
Not exactly what the article about, given that Miku is massively crowdsourced, and provides opportunities for musicians, rather than taking away jobs. But a funny coincidence nonetheless.
Grocery stores rarely have any traditional checkout counters open
You must not be shopping at the same chains I shop at. Where I shop, the self-scan lanes are "n items or less", and a full cart needs to go in a traditional checkout. Besides, alcoholic beverages can't go through a self-scan.
OMG 99% of all agriculture jobs will be GONE by 1990! What will all the unemployed do?
By 2025 I predict very little will have changed because every time someone predicts the accumulation of dead labor will put the living out of work they end up being wrong.
More importantly I don't believe AI is going anywhere in the next 10 years... despite all advancements and R&D the technology has for decades been stuck in a search and pattern recognition jail.
--
.nosig
Why is it that people are deaf, dumb and blind?? The purpose of all technology is the elimination of labor. Most employment has already been eliminated. So a statement that one third of existing employment will be eliminated soon is not a shock at all. I would be shocked if it is as low as one third by the way. Most of us recall the offices with one girl at a desk to answer phones and type a bit and do books. Cell phones eliminated those employees by the millions. And computers enable people to type nice correspondence that only skilled typists could accomplish with a typewriter. Meanwhile accountants took a severe hit when Turbo tax and the like were used by the masses as well as small businesses. It is just a part of a trend. Go back to the days when we used horses and mules to transport ourselves and our products. Is anuone even slightly aware of how much work is involved in keeping a horse? TRUTH: we will be forced to abandon capitalism soon. Some kind of social welfare state will be the only possible answer. It will be normal for most of society to be supported by taxes paid by businesses. It is not because of beliefs or values or any of that junk. It is because it is the only system fit to survive. We will experience shocking changes in the way we live and some will be for the better. You can also bet that we will be regualted in our behaviors more than at any time in history. Things like vacation cruise ships may cease to exist. international travel may be banned. And there will be all kinds of conflicts on allowing imports and exports.
In the future I expect more and more small businesses and boutiques. You can run a small yet profitable business with just two or three people.
Never mind that you are operating in a high-failure part of the private sector with people that cannot really afford to fail. That, and you have no scale to offset purchase costs, especially those relating to benefits.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
We need to separate employers from healthcare anyways.
Only if you don't like the benefits coming from economies of scale. Those disappear even in the ACA.
You can enjoy your second-tier care with an small employer while I'll enjoy less sacrifice with a direct-hire/non-contractor employer that can use economies of scale to provide more benefits per dollar.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
So many inward-facing comments. About a single person, a single family, a single country, everything is exclusive. What would happen if suddenly everyone in the world thought inclusively of everyone else? If we stopped hoarding "stuff" and spent all our time figuring out how to pull everyone else down to feel big, we would suddenly be in a completely new world that needed less labor spent on survival. If we saw people worse off than ourselves, instead of secretly feeling good about it, we would go prop those people up. We would re-allocate the waste on making society better. Tired of someone "working the system"? Make it your task to help those people directly, since we don't all have to grind away every day with some pointless task.
If the 90% of the resources that 10% (or whatever the actual statistics are) control were used on improving the world, we could easily have that moon base and cure stupid diseases. We could stop paying doctors to symptom fix people and actually proactively fix health. We could get rid of all the processed garbage.
one in three jobs will be taken by robots by 2025
Steve Jobs got taken by robots in 2011.
#DeleteChrome
utter nonsense. Anyone thinking that this kind of change will happen in 10 years has no idea what kind of timescale is really involved in replacing "1 in 3 jobs" in terms of just raw economy, never mind the political and ethical side
Especially in the light of the improved random number generator in the new Linux Kernel...
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
proles for?
Ooops me prol too, outch
Why do people think this changes anything for anyone but the people who own this automation?
It make their margins thicker. It does nothing for us but reduce the available jobs.
Since 2/3rds of the workers will be dead from Ebola, it will even out.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
my job should be safe, as long as I'm creating said software
One In Three Jobs Will Be Taken By Humans By 2050, Says Bender
NOW is the time to remake our economy to guarantee everyone a income that satisfied all basic needs. Let people work for luxuries and EAT THE RICH!
Gartner. Extrapolation. Twats. That is all.
All of these blue collar jihadis and tank hunters will be out of a job by 2025. Thats sad :(
I would just like to remind everyone that Gartner was the same group that repeatedly warned us what a global disaster Y2K would be.
Proverbs 21:19
Automation will take us last.
To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
This is linear thinking, but in reality all of this is non-linear.
What about new jobs and new industries?
They should do a non-linear analysis of the economy and see what they come up with.
Also, we are living better than we ever have so I am not sure what the big deal is?
Yes maybe we will live in Star Trek utopia or Mad Max hell, but we should alway push forward and try to better humani
We most certainly do have the means to transport those things, we just choose not to because we care more about money than we do about our fellow Earth-inhabitors. You're right about foreign governments, but that is still a choice made by humans, not some technological hurdle.
Can Software and Robots replace Gartner?
Casteism
By 2025 this world will be much different, maybe completely destroyed and maybe 2/3 of world people dead... so I wouldn't buy this predictions that in the near future people won't do almost nothing. Machines have their places, but humans need to work, and they will... at least those that are still live then.
One third of the population may be unemployed, but the minimum wage will be $30 an hour!
GOPlutocrats' minions in the US Congress and SCOTUS all agree If you need work, drop dead or join the military for the robotic extinction war.
Unaccountable leaders are masters, and unrepresented people are slaves. How do US and EU fare?
Posting to undo accidental mod
given the lightweight magic quadrants we've been seeing for years (that basically measure an orgs reported revenues) I'd imagine the first jobs to be taken by the robots will be the analysts.
Why do you need Robots when 2 billion wage slaves in CHINDIA are at your service?
Casteism