Bloomberg
Financial services workers will be among the first to be hit by the rise of automation while women will feel the effects earlier than men, according to research by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
The report—which analysed more than 200,000 jobs across
29 countries—anticipates three stages of automation between now and the mid-2030s, which will eventually impact almost one third of UK workers.
The first, the algorithm wave, is already underway.
Areas likely to be automated sectors most likely to be affected of UK jobs impacted. The algorithm wave—to early-2020s, structured data analysis and simple digital tasks, such as credit scoring, financial, professional and technical services, information and communications, 2-3 percent augmentation wave, dynamic interaction with technology for clerical support and decision making.
Aerial drones, robots in warehouses and semi-autonomous vehicles, all industry sectors, with financial services still most impacted 20 percent autonomy wave—by mid-2030s. AI to analyse data from multiple sources, make decisions and take physical actions with little or no human input and transport, manufacturing and retail 30 percent.
PwC found more women will initially be affected, with men more likely to feel the effects in the third wave by the mid-2030s due to the current gender profiles of employment in different sectors. Higher educated workers—particularly in clerical and analytical roles—may take a bigger hit early on, but the less qualified will be particularly exposed in the long run. While that means workers may need support to learn fresh skills and find new employment, PwC Chief Economist John Hawksworth said that, overall, the change will be positive for the British economy.
“We don’t believe that automation will lead to mass technological unemployment by the 2030s, any more than it has done in the decades since the digital revolution began. In the long run, AI, robotics and related technologies should not only make a significant contribution to UK. GDP of up to 10 percent, but should also generate enough new jobs to broadly offset the potential job losses.â€