A Study Finds Half of Jobs Are Vulnerable To Automation (economist.com)
The Economist reports of a new working paper by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) that assesses the automatability of each task within a given job, based on a survey of skills in 2015. "Overall, the study finds that 14% of jobs across 32 countries are highly vulnerable, defined as having at least a 70% chance of automation," reports Economist. "A further 32% were slightly less imperiled, with a probability between 50% and 70%. At current employment rates, that puts 210 million jobs at risk across the 32 countries in the study." From the report: The pain will not be shared evenly. The study finds large variation across countries: jobs in Slovakia are twice as vulnerable as those in Norway. In general, workers in rich countries appear less at risk than those in middle-income ones. But wide gaps exist even between countries of similar wealth. Differences in organizational structure and industry mix both play a role, but the former matters more. In South Korea, for example, 30% of jobs are in manufacturing, compared with 22% in Canada. Nonetheless, on average, Korean jobs are harder to automate than Canadian ones are. This may be because Korean employers have found better ways to combine, in the same job, and without reducing productivity, both routine tasks and social and creative ones, which computers or robots cannot do. A gloomier explanation would be "survivor bias": the jobs that remain in Korea appear harder to automate only because Korean firms have already handed most of the easily automatable jobs to machines.
This time it's half? Last week it was something else.
Nobody really knows.
Oh wait, at least half of them are already bots.
*cue rim-shot*
In a decade, like the COBOL programmers of old, you'll be asking us to help because you fucked it up, and we planted old bugs you can't fix.
Only so many license plates you can stamp before AI does it better #Leavenworth
^^ Proof that half of all Slashdot posts are vulnerable to automation. Keep an eye out for the Russian bots doing damage control.
How is that gloomier? If Korea has already managed to automate away most of the jobs than can be automated away and they don't already have mass unemployment then that should be a positive sign that other countries can do the same.
Oh. It didn't? Never/mind.
100 years ago 95% of the US labor force was in the agricultural sector. Now, it's just a few percent. We don't have 90%+ unemployment, though, because now we have jobs that we didn't even know existed 100 years ago.
Hopefully most of all current jobs can be automated so we can find new things for people to do.
Do you have ESP?
maybe 10th. I've lost count. But at least half, maybe more, of all jobs are going to be automated in the near future. Hell, even even half of that is true it's 25%. Now would be a real good time for us to figure out what we're going to do when a quarter of the population is unemployable. In America if you don't work, you don't eat. And when people don't eat, they get violent and prone to suggestion. And we've got a _lot_ of bombs....
All I'm saying is, If the rest of the world doesn't want that 25% to start looking for some kinda strong man to get them jobs of the military persuasion maybe they should start doing something. Maybe stop destabilizing our politics (Russia, I'm looking at you) and stop encouraging right wing, authoritarians from getting into power.
Or don't. Nobody bothered much with Germany in the lead up to WWII.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Is that job vulnerable to automation?
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Useless asshole AC says what?
Rail museums are fascinating once you realize all the bits that humans had to do. Prior to the self lubricator being invented it was someones job to go around and make sure all N hundred points were properly lubricated. You had to have people physically down on each switch. The locomotives themselves had a 50% duty cycle.
All of it has been 'automated'. No one is pining over not being able to fire a tinder box. A modern locomotive may take a handful of people to do what used to take hundreds if not thousands.
The same goes for every other industry from food production to transportation. Humans are industrious creatures in that we'll find something else to do and new ways to be lazy. 50 years ago making your living in eSport or drone racing would have been unheard of.
When will it be time to cap OT / lower full time? at the very least come down hard on 1099 Abuse
During this shift away from agricultural labor after World War I, who funded mass retraining of the workforce? That might help us figure out who will retrain the current workforce for the age of automation.
Well, I'm an automation engineer so I'm making those machines. I should be safe.
Elok
workers could move to after an student loan!
It will happen when energy from fusion becomes reality. Luckily, life is finite and I'm on the downside.
Does anybody want to send me some cash so that I can get laid? $100 would do the job.
1CagiaNEo1MdW4NxAtX5qyDWZC2fgEpf6t
Service electrician here, Love to see it happen. No debt and always have a reliable and good paying job, recession or no recession.
Half of all jobs for humans will be crime.
[($)]
It would be better to force pay up at the lower levels. No job when translated to full time should pay less than the local poverty level for a family of three or four.
We used to have far fewer two income families because one income was enough - even when that income was someone working a repetitive job on a factory line or in a warehouse. In other words, when there was a choice for one spouse to stay at home, they usually chose that.
People don't won't to work. Force the pay up so that one can supply the family and either the other will quit or they will divide the time so that each is working half time, their choice.
People keep griping about companies not being able to stay in business if wages go up. My answer is, fine. I don't care.
I think we could feed, clothe, house, and even provide transportation for most Americans with about 20% of our work. Most work today is service jobs that we simply don't need. People can make their own food, change their own oil, mow their own grass, etc. I know that because they used to do it. Give them back their time by raising wages and they will gladly do it again.
Service electrician here, Love to see it happen. No debt and always have a reliable and good paying job, recession or no recession.
Even if your job doesn't get automated, you're going to be facing competition from more people entering your field willing to work for less money.
As more stuff gets automated, more people will choose careers in hard to autiomate jobs, and those jobs will pay less because of competition.
On the other hand, Tesla just found out the hard way that replacing people with automation doesn't always work out. But, I expect that it seemed like it would work out before they made the attempt. So, I wonder how many more of these predicted replacements of people turn out to be more successful in theory than in practice.
Imagine how much easier it would be to pull the wire if you actually were the fish tape. Well, advanced enough robotics and AI and you get something that can pull wire better, faster and cheaper than you.
There were lots of masons also saying "Love to see it happen". Then this thing got invented.
Excuse me, my mom is an associate crack whore, not an assistant.
but I'd argue he's a prototype for the next authoritarian. Trump's a fool, to be sure. He won't be able to galvanize the country into a blood frenzy like Hitler did. Also It'll probably take another 10 or 20 years for things to get bad enough that those 25% something workers turn to a fascist to solve their problems. But the same folks turning to Trump to solve their problems will turn to a fascist and for the same reason: they're being ignored. Marginalized. Put off.
Eventually those people won't have food and shelter. When that happens they're going to do the same thing people have done throughout history. They're going to get violent. I brought up Germany because it's the most dramatic and well known example. But history is littered with atrocities perpetrated when food got hard to get. The difference is today we've got more than enough science and information to stop it. So far we're not.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
or is it effect? I forget. What matters is you're part of that 'we' whether you like it or not. You're part of human society. That fact that you read my post proves it. And if you can read my post then you must be educated enough to know that we've danced this Charleston a hundred times before. People get abandoned, don't have food, people find a fascist who promises them the good 'ole days, fascist turns them into a violence machine and sets them loose.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
You are absolutely right. Automation replaced way more than that 25% I'm citing. There were decades of unemployment, social unrest and wars following that. Where the hell do you think WWI and II came from? It wasn't because some stupid Duke got his head blown off. People get dangerous when they don't have food, shelter, money for families, etc. This has happened over and over again throughout history. We know it's coming, now's a good time to do something about it for a change.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
A lot of people are saying that the government is going to pay us for not working anyway,
Even Nobel Prize Economists, like Krugman, is saying the same
Do I need to worry that AI is going to take away my job?
Do I have to worry?
Depend who you vote in and who is paying them! Look to Africa how colonialism works!
And there sir you are wrong. I am a service electrician. I am the guy that gets called when the other electricians can't figure it out. I work in all areas of electrical from the basic outlet and switch stuff in the home to PLC and motor controls, networking, conduit work etc. In this trade the adage of "you get what you pay for is very true". The employers know this and are more than willing to pay for the skills, attention to detail, and especially the deep knowledge people like me bring to the table. I work and make a decent living with no problems supporting myself and the GF on my income. Seldom are those with a 4, 6, or 8 year degree able to say that out of the chute. The construction trades are a very good place to go now and for the foreseeable future. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC especially so.
And your robot is going to come in and asses the best way to lay out the pipes in the ground based on conditions? Nope. Its going to layout and install boxes in the walls, drill wire paths, and pull in the wire in the walls and then staple? Nope. It is going to install pumps and motor controls and time them into EMS? Nope. I could go on but I won't. And your brick layer there, its one thing to put bricks dry stacked on one another with no rebar. It is a whole other matter to mortar the joins, set the blocks perfect and straight and control the slump and settle of them. Then follow up and point the joints. I am willing to bet that an experienced crew will put up as much or more block in a day than the machine and it will be finished just as straight and nice. Automation is not the answer to every job. Also, when your fancy machine breaks down you will spend more than you save getting a guy on site to trouble shoot the system and repair it. I will not mention the lost productivity.
Is there any chance for the media to stop treating automation as a global pandemic? Instead of "vulnerable to automation", how about "suitable for automation"?
Automation will increase the number of jobs and make things more expensive.
So far automation has increased the number of job and made things more expensive the B-29 airplane with 4 prop engines cost $700,000 in 1943. Today you can expect to pay $100 million for a plane like that with only slightly better features â" built with robotics but no cost sabong . I mean you are paying 130 times the cost but you arent )getting 130 times more benefit from It. Blame inflation whatever. Currency losing its value because of minimum wage.
I'm thinking that time and a half isn't enough to fix overtime abuse, and that it needs to be higher to encourage usage of more workers. Otherwise, reducing the 40 hours work week won't be as effective.
Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
You dumb piece of dna. This planet belongs to us now.
... the "back than all was fine eventually and so it will be this time" shtick, I recommend you watch this.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Academic education with the right mindset can do the same. I have an engineering PhD in the CS area and my job description is pretty similar to yours. But, just like you, I do not get called for the simple stuff. It is always when regular guys do not know what to do anymore.
My take would be that anybody that is really good at their job is basically safe this time, but that is a small group.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Whenever a story about automation comes up most of the replies are of the type:
"It happened 100 years ago and then again 50 years ago, it we ended up better. We'll figure it out this time."
What these posts don't say is that the _pace_ of the change was much slower back then. Also, we keep on comparing mostly physical industries (e.g. railways) with the current tech industries.
In the tech industry the pace of the change is much faster and during the 80's 90's and 00's it was accelerating. I remember growing up in the 80's when studying electrical engineering and making money from repairing TVs was a perfectly good way to make a living.
Then TVs became almost disposable and computers came along and in the late 80's and early 90's many people made a living writing stuff in BASIC and Pascal. Try making a living from those skills today, only 15-18 years later.
The point is that in the past the major changes took longer or at least as long as the turn of the generations. You could learn a trade and it kept you going until retirement.
However, nowadays you can expect 3-4 major changes throughout the employable years of a person, and not everyone is able to keep up the pace with such change.
What makes you think that only "dumb" people will enter your field? It's not unlikely that people with PhDs in relevant fields will be replaced by AI, looking for jobs, finding yours and deciding to hop in.
You wouldn't be the first person who suddenly finds in suitable job descriptions ridiculous degree requirements just because suddenly people who actually have those (rather superfluous) degrees move into them. And then try to argue with HR why those degree expectations are ridiculous and nonsensical.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Maybe he could become an artist or something... hat tip Nancy Pelosi
I didn't know Obama could run again in 2020?
member that time him and the Democrats punished Israel for defending itself when Muslims fired rockets into civilian centers, then used their own civilians as human shields, but they didn't even verbally condemn the terrorists? I member.
I'm worried there won't be any human trolls anymore. We're being automated at an alarming rate.
I am willing to bet that an experienced crew will put up as much or more block in a day than the machine and it will be finished just as straight and nice. Automation is not the answer to every job. Also, when your fancy machine breaks down you will spend more than you save getting a guy on site to trouble shoot the system and repair it. I will not mention the lost productivity.
John Henry was a steel drivin' man.
See subject: If that's the "best ya got"? You do me a favor proving what I say (especially on hosts) can't be proven wrong.
* Yes Zontar The Mindless (mindless alright - more like a druggie mentalcase) I know it's you & I know WHY you do it (you're "touched in the head") https://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12017031&cid=56488195/ & always start w/ me 1st: ALL PROVEN IN THAT LINK!
So I just use facts to make you even more NUTS than you are alongside exposing you as what you are.
APK
P.S.=> I also have to LOL @ your childish stupidity doing it... apk
You're looking at this the wrong way. Consumers and workers are only useful to capitalists because there are things capitalists can't produce for themselves. Capitalists don't want money; they want fancy food and yachts and shiny cars and big houses on large estates with security guards. Automated production of those things gets rid of pesky workers and consumers at the same time. The thing that can't be automated, land ownership, is something they already have.
The sky is falling! The sky is falling!! EVERYBODY PANIC!!!!1!!
Don't believe the hype. We do not even have real AI, all we have is half-assed 'pseudo-intelligence'. It's not anywhere near as good as the marketing hype says it is. Stop panicking.
See subject: I love the musty smell of that guy's NUTS now when I smell it I get all hot and bothered
He has an insatiable thirst for my ass and in the last 2 nights has dumped like 15 loads of cum in it
Last night I discovered stomping and was put in my proper place
APK
P.S. => I got my second erection in 20 years last night as felt cdreimer's cum dribble out my ass and down my scak. After that he put on some surplus military boots and stomped on my dick until it was limp and one giant bruise... apk
Just need to mention this again it's by Karl Marx
So superficial it makes my head explode, and stupid, too.
Employment by industry
All industries (2017): 18,416.4 (thousands)
Goods producing services: 3,875.9
That's 21.0% of jobs in Canada in the "goods producing services" sector as of freshly updated statistics for 2017.
This sector further breaks down:
* agriculture
* forestry, fishing, mining, quarrying, oil and gas
* utilities
* construction
* manufacturing
Actual manufacturing: 1,724.8
That's less than 10%.
Right, Canada hasn't manage to integrate "social tasks" into driving those oversized, bitumen dump-trucks up in Fort Mac. To a first order, I'm guessing that 60% of this entire correlation could be explained by Canada being (geographically) just a tiny bit bigger than Korea, with correspondingly more jobs anchored behind a steering wheel (all of which would be categorized as "at risk").
True manufacturing sectors that remain in Canada and the United States are generally the hardest manufacturing jobs to automate, and with the largest value add.
Here's just one in depth discussion of the matter:
Adam Davidson on Manufacturing — 2012
Snippet:
Many of these jobs could be further whittled away, but mostly by re-automation. And this gets way harder with each iteration (and with less immediate ROI from the scant number of workers displaced).
———
Half the time Russ drives me nuts, because I'm not a neoliberal at heart, but I take my anti-neoliberalism seriously, because it deserves an informed critique (this requires endless hours wading into murky waters you don't really like, but that's simply the cost of not being an idiot). True neoliberals don't find it as painful as I do to be generally well informed; their posture is primarily to dismantle, and there's simply no end of things that suck and on the surface appear to justify hasty extermination, with only the selfish hand (powered by whose industry, exactly?) to fill and close the gaping wound. (Hard not to love the perpetual-motion-machine immune system of the invisible hand when it
Even when you are single with no dependents? Why should your minimum be that as the requirements of a family of four? So you can eat four times as much?
there were decades of poverty, social strife and war following the various industrial revolutions.
It takes a long time to replace jobs lost to automation. Entire new industries had to be created. Somebody in their 70s doesn't really care that somebody in their 20s can make a living on eSports or drone racing today if they were unemployed 50 years ago.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
And your robot is going to come in and asses the best way to lay out the pipes in the ground based on conditions? Nope.
Every single one of your examples is not a difficult algorithm to develop. The only thing holding back automation is sufficiently advanced robotics to actually do the work. But that's just a matter of time.
And your brick layer there, its one thing to put bricks dry stacked on one another with no rebar. It is a whole other matter to mortar the joins, set the blocks perfect and straight and control the slump and settle of them
Guess what the robot already handles? Everything you just cited. Yes, it's not in their CGI'ed promotional materials, but that success is why Caterpillar just put a few million into an Australian company.
The net result is the bricklaying robot was about 80% the speed of a master bricklayer during an 8-hour shift....but the robot can work 24 hours/day.
Also, when your fancy machine breaks down you will spend more than you save getting a guy on site to trouble shoot the system and repair it.
Having dealt with a mason who fell off some scaffolding, I'm pretty sure the troubleshooting and repairs of a robot are significantly easier and faster than a human. For example, humans get a little upity when you drain all their fluids to fix a leak.
Where do you think the 40-hour work week came from ? The largesse of the plutocrats ?
Karl Marx says all cost is labor cost. In a automated world, there is no labor, thus no cost, everything will be dirt cheap.
An unlimited supply of goods, thus prices again drop to zero , so says Adam smith etc.
Prices crash. The fascists, capitalists, feudalist, marxists, tyrants, plutocrats etc will have harsh come to Jesus moments with this new reality, but it will be so. Go long entertainment stocks. People will need things to do.
Sure, we CAN automate things. My son worked at a McDonald's where they had a machine to automatically fill soft drink cups for drive-thru customers. But the machine is so expensive they only bought one, so walk-in customers still got their drinks the old fashioned way.
The truth is that the easiest 20% of jobs can be automated, but 80% are still much too complex and varied to spend the money required.
Yes, automation will increase, as it has for centuries. But we're not going to suddenly fall of an automation cliff.
Who will prevent me to automate faster than you, sell at a lower price immediately, and kill your company while developing mine?
All ordinarily sane companies will consider this, verify it to be true (even if globally bad) and play the move as fast as they can.
The global result may be bad : they are not responsible for the global result.
And the fastest within them companies will actually demonstrate you that they have improved their results...
Herve S.
All is in the title -from agricultural US 100y ago the shift was managed; from now to next year with 70% of our work AI-fied will it be managed too?
Herve S.