Robot revolution: rise of 'thinking' machines could
exacerbate inequality
Global
economy will be transformed over next 20 years at risk of growing inequality,
say analysts
Robots made by Shaanxi Jiuli Robot Manufacturing Co on
display at an industry fair in Shanghai in November. Photograph:
Imaginechina/Corbis
Wednesday 4 November 2015 19.01 ESTLast modified on
Thursday 5 November 201503.39 EST
A “robot revolution” will transform the global
economy over the next 20 years, cutting the costs of doing business but
exacerbating social inequality, as machines take over everything from caring for the elderly to
flipping burgers, according to a new study.
As well as robots performing manual jobs, such
as hoovering the living room or assembling machine parts, the development of artificial
intelligence means computers are increasingly able to “think”, performing
analytical tasks once seen as requiring human judgment.
In a 300-page report, revealed exclusively to
the Guardian, analysts from investment bank Bank of America Merrill Lynch draw
on the latest research to outline the impact of what they regard as a fourth
industrial revolution, after steam, mass production and electronics.
“We are facing a paradigm shift which will
change the way we live and work,” the authors say. “The pace of disruptive
technological innovation has gone from linear to parabolic in recent years.
Penetration of robots and artificial intelligence has hit every industry
sector, and has become an integral part of our daily lives.”
However, this revolution could leave up to 35%
of all workers in the UK, and 47% of those in the US, at risk of being
displaced by technology over the next 20 years, according to Oxford University
research cited in the report, with job losses likely to be concentrated at the
bottom of the income scale.
“The trend is worrisome in markets like the US
because many of the jobs created in recent years are low-paying, manual or
services jobs which are generally considered ‘high risk’ for replacement,” the
bank says.
“One major risk off the back of the take-up of
robots and artificial intelligence is the potential for increasing labour
polarisation, particularly for low-paying jobs such as service occupations, and
a hollowing-out of middle income manual labour jobs.”
The authors calculate that the total global
market for robots and artificial intelligence is expected to reach $152.7bn
(£99bn) by 2020, and estimate that the adoption of these technologies could
improve productivity by 30% in some industries.
The robotics market is expected to be worth $66.9bn by
2025
They point out that Google bought eight
robotics companies in a two-month period in 2014, from Boston Dynamics, which
makes the BigDog robot, to DeepMind, specialising in deep learning for
artificial intelligence.
In the most advanced manufacturing sectors –
among Japan’s carmakers, for example – robots are already able to work
unsupervised round the clock for up to 30 days without interruption. While
offshoring manufacturing jobs to low-cost economies can save up to 65% on
labour costs, replacing human workers with robots saves up to 90%.
Manufacturers could save up to 90% of wage costs by
replacing workers with robots
At present, there are on average 66 robots per
10,000 workers worldwide, the report finds; but in the highly automated
Japanese car sector there are 1,520.
But it is not just low-skilled jobs, such as
assembly-line work, that could be replaced: a report from the McKinsey Global
Institute in 2013 found that up to $9tn in global wage costs
could be saved as computers take over knowledge-intensive tasks such as
analysing consumers’ credit ratings and providing financial advice.
Enthusiasts for the rise of robots argue that
they can overcome the foibles and fallibilities of human workers. The report
cites research that showed judges tend to be more draconian in the runup to
lunchtime and more lenient once they have eaten, for example.
It urges consumers to invest in businesses
that are already taking advantage of the benefits of the new technologies:
“Early adoption will be a key comparative advantage, while those that lag in
investment will see their competitiveness slip.”
However, the bank also points out that major
ethical and social issues will increasingly arise: they cite the moral
questions about the growing use of unmanned drones in warfare;
and even the emergence of a pressure group called the Campaign Against Sex Robots.
Fears about humans being displaced by machines
are not new: in the early 19th century bands of angry Luddites smashed up the
steam-powered looms that were throwing hand-weavers out of work.
Beijia Ma, the report’s lead author, said that
over the past 200 years and more, societies have eventually found ways of turning technological developments to
their advantage.
She said the best advice for people fearing
the rise of the robots is to polish up their skills. “It’s not meant to be a
doom and gloom report: one of the ways we think people could help themselves
here is through education.”
However, Ma added that a recent survey of
industry experts, by the US polling firm Pew, revealed a stark divide between
techno-optimists and pessimists.
Almost half of them, 48%, believed the rise of
robots and artificial intelligence would have “a massive detrimental impact on
society, where digital agents displace both blue- and white-collar workers,
leading to income inequality and breakdowns in social order”.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, 52% “anticipated that human
ingenuity would overcome andcreate new jobs and industries”.
Andrew Simms, of thinktank the New
Weather Institute, said the rise of new technologies could be an
opportunity to realise the aspirations of the economist John Maynard Keynes,
who predicted in 1930 that within a century, technology would have enabled the
working week to be reduced to 15 hours with the rest of the time devoted to
leisure.
However, without rethinking the relationship
between work and society, the result could be a growing disparity between
economic winners and losers.
“We are in danger, for the first time in
history, of creating a large number of people who are not needed,” he said.
“The question should be, what sort of economy do you want, and to meet what
human needs?”
Under
threat?
A wide range of jobs could eventually be taken
over by machines, Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s analysts predict.
Burger flippers A San
Francisco-based start-up called Momentum Machines has designed a robot that
would replicate the hot, repetitive tasks of the fast-food worker: shaping
burgers from ground meat, grilling them to order, toasting buns, and adding
tomatoes, onions and pickles.
Manufacturing workers Relatively
low-skilled industrial workers in rich countries have become used to competing
against cut-price employees in cheaper economies. But while “offshoring” can
cut labour costs by 65%, replacing workers with machines can cut them by up to
90%. The process is well advanced in countries such as Japan and South Korea;
as other countries catch up, many more jobs will be taken over by technology.
Financial advisers Bespoke
financial advice seems like the epitome of a “personal” service; but it could
soon be replaced by increasingly sophisticated algorithms that can tailor their
responses to an individual’s circumstances.
Doctors Some
570,000 “robo-surgery” operations were performed last year. Oncologists at the
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York have used IBM’s Watson
supercomputer, which can read 1m textbooks in three seconds, to help them with
diagnosis. Other medical applications of computer technology involve everything
from microscopic cameras to “robotic controlled catheters”.
Care workers Merrill
Lynch predicts that the global personal robot market, including so-called
“care-bots”, could increase to $17bn over the next five years, “driven by
rapidly ageing populations, a looming shortfall of care workers, and the need
to enhance performance and assist rehabilitation of the elderly and disabled”.
No comments:
Post a Comment