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Bankers Publicly Embracing Robots Are Privately Fearing Job Cuts (bloomberg.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Within the upper echelons of many financial firms, there's a lot of soul searching as executives prepare to roll out a new generation of technology. Publicly, they're upbeat, predicting machines will perform almost all repetitive tasks, freeing humans to focus on more valuable pursuits. Privately, many confide to peers, consultants and sometimes journalists that they're worried about what will happen to their staffs -- and what to tell them. There's also uncertainty. Maybe it's all overblown, executives say, because the tech will be hard to implement and humans will find new roles. Or perhaps it's the beginning of the end for legions of professionals in one of the world's most lucrative fields. Can jobs held by office-dwelling millionaires disappear like those on factory floors? The result, is that employees aren't getting a clear message on what's to come.

For a rosy scenario, look to McKinsey & Co. In July, the consulting firm published a report estimating machines are ready to assume roughly a third of the work now performed by banks' rank and file. The authors framed it as positive: People will have more time to tend to clients, conduct research or brainstorm ideas. So far, it noted, firms at the forefront aren't slashing jobs. At JPMorgan Chase & Co., one of the most tech-savvy banks, Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon predicted in June that his workforce will more likely grow than shrink over the next 20 years. Technology may displace workers, he's said, but it also creates opportunities. Yet in interviews, about a dozen Wall Street executives and consultants responsible for deploying technologies -- and steeped in their capabilities -- were more bearish on humans. Machines will take over task after task, they said, and banks simply won't need nearly as many people.

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  1. Re:Nationalize Banks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    In the US at least, banks are so deeply in bed with the government that they ought to just be nationalized.

    Sure. And the medical system is more than half funded by the government, and all of it is tightly coupled through the regulatory system, so that should be nationalized. And the auto companies are mostly a function of government, having relied on government on several occasions for support, so they should be nationalized too. And Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac constitute the lender of last resort for the millions of homeowners that wouldn't otherwise be able to obtain financing effectively establishing the clearing price for property debt so there's another whole industry that should just be nationalized. And higher education, being largely a function of government grants, subsidies and government backed debt should just be rolled into the rest of the education apparatus as another function of government.

    This is pretty much how Greece and Venezuela function. Any thoughts on why the young of those nations that harbor even a little ambition evacuate at the first opportunity? Perhaps that sort of reprobate is why certain other nations maintained gulag systems...