A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 15, 2019

How Come the Tech Sector May Not Be Able To Solve Automation Job Loss

Research suggests that techno-optimists believe STEM education or coding schools or simple demand for tech jobs will drive the market to fill the need by inspiring those without those skills to take them up.

But the reality is that the number of people likely to be displaced by automation is far greater than the number either intellectually or technologically capable of making that transition, able to afford the training required by themselves or living in a location where access to the appropriate opportunities for doing so are available.

In other words, there is, at present, a distinct absence of realistic thinking about this issue, especially by those who abhor the notion of government participation. JL


Jordan Dworkin and Illia Blinderman report in Pudding:

For people whose jobs are at risk, the transition to software development makes ostensible sense: it’s a job that’s highly unlikely to become automated, and affords a good income. (But) truckers and developers have few similarities in terms of the competencies necessary for their respective jobs. It is crucial that software developers excel at programming, a skill that’s irrelevant to truckers. Future-proof white-collar jobs are difficult to implement among workers who lack the technical background, (and) not everyone has the knowledge base to become a developer or mathematician, with the resources they have at hand.
Arms spread and a smile on his face, Elon Musk welcomed the crowd to the Tesla semi truck unveiling. “I hope you like what you see,” he said, to cheers from the audience. Though innovations like Tesla’s promise increased safety and efficiency for the industries they inhabit, these advances in automation and AI promise uncertainty, and potential displacement, for the workers in their way.
While many are calling for the government to step in, in this piece we are going to focus on the workers themselves. Specifically, we want to ask how workers should train and be trained to most effectively switch jobs. In this context, discussions often focus on the somewhat drastic example of switching from blue-collar work to computer programming. While there are organizations doing great work to facilitate this switch, we wanted to use this example to ask: Is it necessary for workers to move that far across the job landscape to avoid automation?
To better understand the potential effects of automation, a recent study by Carl Frey and Michael Osborne estimated the “automatability” of hundreds of different jobs. Jobs with a high social component and a high number of non-routine tasks, like elementary school teachers, are unlikely to become automated. Jobs with many monotonous tasks and a low requirement for complex social skills, like telemarketers, are likely to be replaced by machines.There are nearly 2 million heavy truck drivers in the U.S. For many years, it’s allowed people without a college education to maintain a dependable, middle-class income. According to Frey and Osborne, the likelihood that heavy truck drivers will become automated is 79%. If jobs in trucking are scaled back or replaced, many of the 2 million will lose a stable and secure pathway to the middle class.
For people whose jobs are at risk, the transition to software development makes ostensible sense: it’s a job that’s highly unlikely to become automated, and affords a good income. By surveying workers on the importance of various skills and knowledge areas to their job, the Department of Labor provides a way to understand the components of each job. As expected, it is crucial that software developers excel at programming — a skill that’s largely irrelevant to truckers.
(With) some of the skills by which the Department of Labor describes all jobs, unsurprisingly, truckers and developers have relatively few similarities in terms of the competencies necessary for their respective jobs.By looking at the differences between software developers and truck drivers across this range of skills, we can tell how far their expertise diverge.We can place other careers on a line, from least similar to most similar in skill to truck drivers. When comparing the skills among these professions, pipelayers are most similar to truck drivers, while CEOs are most different. Ideally, truck drivers would transition to jobs that are similar in skills, but that are less automatable.We can place every single career listed by the Department of Labor on a horizontal axis, from least similar in skill to most similar. Of nearly 700 jobs, psychologists are most distinct from truck drivers, while septic tank servicers and sewer pipe cleaners have the greatest skills overlap.
Some career alternatives based on skills alone, like becoming a sailor, may first seem viable, but are, in fact, more susceptible to automation than truckers. Ideally, we would help truck drivers transition to jobs that are similar in skills, but that are less automatable, so let’s remove every job that’s at greater risk of automation.the jobs with low automatability and similar skills to truckers. In this case, ambulance driving, which is unlikely to be automated, seem like a viable alternative. We should also, however, consider the salaries that these professions will earn as well. Truck drivers earn around $44,000 a year, so an alternative job should have a similar income.
Many alternative jobs for truckers, including ambulance drivers, have a much lower income. Yet ship engineers bring in a similar income, have closely related skills, and are less at risk of automation than truck drivers. We should, however, consider one final job characteristic: the number of these jobs that will likely be available in 10 years. If there are nearly 2 million truckers in America today, which occupations will have a big enough market for the large number of truck drivers to comfortably make the transition?
When we add job availability, corresponding to circle size, into this equation, there are even fewer jobs to consider. Yet a few good options appear that offer an easier transition than software development. Two examples are electricians and supervisors of extraction/construction workers. These jobs have similar levels of employment and offer modest income increases, while being much safer from automation than truck driving.
Future-proof white-collar jobs are, doubtless, an appealing set of options for solving the potential automation crisis. They are, nevertheless, difficult to implement among workers who lack the necessary technical background — not everyone has the knowledge base to become, say, a successful developer or mathematician, with the resources they have at hand. As tempting as it may be to shepherd everyone towards tech-heavy careers, we ought to be more thoughtful with our proposed solutions. After all, millions of people’s futures depend on it.


4 comments:

shopify said...

Securityx containment and remediation. Along with that, we also cover the entire lifecycle of a security incident.

shopify said...

With our expert services, you get to achieve optimum results that are important while building your brand’s online presence. Shopify app development

shopify said...

Your team doesn’t need to take any special training to learn how to track their time properly. Only one click or tap is needed to clock in, and another one to clock out. It’s as easy as that. time tracking app

Post a Comment