While Donald Trump quite
regularly refers to either bringing jobs back to America or keeping jobs in
America, a paper by Carl Frey and Michael Osborne shows
that outsourcing jobs to foreign shores may not be the only mechanism that is
keeping Americans unemployment at elevated levels, particularly in
manufacturing and the service sector.
In their paper entitled
"The Future of Employment: How Susceptible are Jobs to
Computerization?", the authors looked at the probability of
computerization for 702 "detailed occupations" with the ultimate goal
of looking at the number of jobs at risk in the future and the relationship
between an occupation's probability of computerization, wages and educational
level. Using recent advances in machine learning (ML) and mobile robotics
(MR), the authors develop a method by which they can categorize the
aforementioned 702 occupations by their susceptibility to computerization.
The "Computer
Revolution" began in the 1960s with the first commercial use of the
massive, room-filling computing machines of the time. The first industrial robot was
introduced in the 1960s by General Motors and during the 1980s and 1990s,
computing costs declined by an average of 64 percent annually at the same time
as computing power surged. Bar code scanners and ATMs became ubiquitous,
eliminating some jobs in retail and the banking sector and with the
introduction of the first personal computers in the early 1908s, jobs in the clerical
world both changed and were eliminated. The adoption of computerization
had a significant impact on wages with a 1993 study showing that workers using
a computer earning 10 to 15 percent more than other occupations, a situation
that sent many Americans (and others) back to school for further education.
This has resulted in a polarized labour market with growth in
low-income manual occupations that have been resistant to computerization and
high-income cognitive jobs and a decline in the number of Americans (and
others) employed in middle-income routine jobs. As well,
high-skilled workers have moved down the occupational ladder and have
taken jobs that were traditionally performed by low-skilled workers, pushing at
least some of those low-skilled workers right out of the labour force.
The authors focus on two
types of computerization;
1.) machine learning (ML)
which includes data mining, machine vision, computational statistics and other
fields related to the development of artificial intelligence. Advances in
these fields have brought us things like Apple's Siri which can recognize
spoken word and speech recognition/voice response systems which are used in
automated call centres.
2.) mobile robotics (MR)
which leverages ML technologies so that robotic technology can perform the
routine tasks involved in manufacturing. One prime example is the
development of driverless vehicles by Google and the development of robots that
can climb and maintain wind turbine towers by General Electric.
Over the past decades,
robot prices have fallen by about ten percent annually, putting them in the
hands of more users. On a global basis, according to the International Federation of Robots,
industrial robot sales grew by 15 percent on a year-over-year basis in 2015,
hitting a record of 253,748 units with China having a 27 percent share of the
total supply in 2015. The biggest growth was in the electronics industry
with a 41 percent increase, the metal industry with a 39 percent increase and
the plastics and rubber industry with a 16 percent increase.
Now, let's look at the
impact of computerization on employment. Obviously, there are some
occupations that will be more difficult to computerize than others due to
certain bottlenecks as shown here:
Here is a graphic showing
the probability of computerization (low, medium and high) for the Bureau of
Labor Statistics occupational groupings:
Note that the jobs of 47
percent of workers in the United States have a high probability of
computerization and only 33 percent have a low probability of
computerization. In general, science and engineering occupations have a
low susceptibility to computerization because they require a high degree of creative
intelligence. Occupations including health care, education, management,
business and finance, arts and media are also less likely to be computerized because
they require a thorough understanding of social intelligence that cannot (at
least at this point in time) be duplicated with a robot. The authors
suggest that the high probability service,sales, office and administrative support occupations (among others) are likely to find human capital
substituted by computer capital relatively soon. As the advantages of
human dexterity and mobility diminish as robot evolution progresses, the pace
of human - computer labour substitution will grow. Even jobs like personal and household services are
increasingly using robots with the market forecast to grow by 23.5 percent annually between 2015 and 2020.
Here are two tables showing
the probability of computerization for various wage and educational levels:
As you can see, the
probability of computerization rises as median wage drops and as educational
attainment drops.
If you are interested in
a detailed listing of the probability of computerization for each of the 702
occupations, you can find the listing at the end of the article. Here are
two screen captures showing the least susceptible and the most susceptible
occupations for your information:
1.) Least susceptible:
2.) Most susceptible:
From this study, we can
see that automation/robotics/technology bears and will continue to bear at
least some responsibility for the persistence in high real unemployment rates
(i.e. not the U-3 rate that is touted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as its
measure of employment health). Unless America's employers are willing to
shun the latest in both machine learning and mobile robotics, employment growth
in the United States labour force will continue to be constrained even if overseas jobs are repatriated and Donald Trump successfully keeps some jobs in America.
This is why we need to at least consider the possibility of regulating automation, rather than acting as if it were an irresistible force of nature.
ReplyDeleteAnd what happens when other nations produce their goods more cheaply because they use h automation while U.S. produced goods can't compete because of the higher costs of labor? Protectionism then can't protect us from steady economic decline.
DeleteSeveral new technologies headed in our direction scream economic disruption, one writer I follow has pointed out on more than one occasion how self driving vehicles is a game changer. Robots taking our jobs will bode poorly for the huge majority of society. The idea that those ultimately left with the decision as to how to divide the economic pie will be generous or fair is a little naive.
ReplyDeleteIt is increasing clear that automation is not going away. Increasing wages will only accelerate and drive the trend of replacing expensive human workers with robots. the article below delves into some of these issues.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2016/06/its-economy-stupid-trump-should-focus.html