{"id":43304,"date":"2023-10-20T15:27:36","date_gmt":"2023-10-20T15:27:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/startupsmart.test\/2023\/10\/20\/why-we-shouldnt-be-worried-about-robots-taking-our-jobs-just-yet-startupsmart-2\/"},"modified":"2023-10-20T15:27:36","modified_gmt":"2023-10-20T15:27:36","slug":"why-we-shouldnt-be-worried-about-robots-taking-our-jobs-just-yet-startupsmart-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.startupsmart.com.au\/uncategorized\/why-we-shouldnt-be-worried-about-robots-taking-our-jobs-just-yet-startupsmart-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Why we shouldn\u2019t be worried about robots taking our jobs just yet – StartupSmart"},"content":{"rendered":"
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By Michael Jones, University of Cincinnati<\/em><\/p>\n

The U.S. economy added 2.7 million jobs in 2015, capping the best two-year stretch of employment growth since the late \u201890\u2019s, pushing the unemployment rate down to five percent.<\/p>\n

But to listen to the doomsayers, it\u2019s just a matter of time before the rapid advance of technology makes most of today\u2019s workers obsolete \u2013 with ever-smarter machines replacing teachers, drivers, travel agents, interpreters and a slew of other occupations.<\/p>\n

Almost half of those currently employed in the U.S. are at risk of being put out of work by automation in the next decade or two, according to a 2013 University of Oxford study, which identified transportation, logistics and administrative occupations as most vulnerable.<\/p>\n

Does that mean that these formerly employed workers will have nowhere to go? Is the recent job growth a last gasp before machines take over, or can robots and workers coexist?<\/p>\n

Research as well as recent history suggest that these concerns are overblown and that we are neither headed toward a rise of the machine world nor a utopia where no one works anymore. Humans will still be necessary in the economy of the future, even if we can\u2019t predict what we will be doing.<\/p>\n

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Rise of the Luddites<\/h2>\n

Today\u2019s apprehension about technology\u2019s effect on the labor force is nothing new.<\/p>\n

The anxiety began in the early 1800s when textile workers, who later became known as Luddites, destroyed machinery that reduced the need for their labor. The fact that calling someone a Luddite today is considered an insult is proof that those worries were largely unfounded. In fact, labor benefited right alongside productivity throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.<\/p>\n