This may be good news.  Just have to re structure the economy to provide
better income distribution, move to a thirty hour week, etc.  

The economy and society is not about jobs, jobs, jobs no matter what the
politicians say.

We automate to free people from onerous and boring work.  Just have to find
a way to harness the productivity from automation and distribute it to those
who no longer work.

Arthur


-----Original Message-----
From: futurework-boun...@lists.uwaterloo.ca
[mailto:futurework-boun...@lists.uwaterloo.ca] On Behalf Of michael gurstein
Sent: Saturday, September 14, 2013 9:27 PM
To: Futurework
Subject: [Futurework] FW: [Dewayne-Net] Report Suggests Nearly Half of U.S.
Jobs Are Vulnerable to Computerization



-----Original Message-----
From: list...@warpspeed.com [mailto:list...@warpspeed.com] On Behalf Of
Dewayne Hendricks
Sent: Saturday, September 14, 2013 5:38 PM
To: Multiple recipients of Dewayne-Net - Sent by
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Report Suggests Nearly Half of U.S. Jobs Are
Vulnerable to Computerization

[Note:  This item comes from friend Mike Cheponis.  DLH]

From: Michael Cheponis <michael.chepo...@gmail.com>
Subject: Report Suggests Nearly Half of U.S. Jobs Are Vulnerable to
Computerization | MIT Technology Review
Date: September 13, 2013 10:27:09 AM PDT

Report Suggests Nearly Half of U.S. Jobs Are Vulnerable to Computerization
Oxford researchers say that 45 percent of America's occupations will be
automated within the next 20 years.
By Aviva Hope Rutkin
Sep 12 2013
<http://www.technologyreview.com/view/519241/report-suggests-nearly-half-of-
us-jobs-are-vulnerable-to-computerization/>

Rapid advances in technology have long represented a serious potential
threat to many jobs ordinarily performed by people.

A recent report (which is not online, but summarized here) from the Oxford
Martin School's Programme on the Impacts of Future Technology attempts to
quantify the extent of that threat. It concludes that 45 percent of American
jobs are at high risk of being taken by computers within the next two
decades.

The authors believe this takeover will happen in two stages. First,
computers will start replacing people in especially vulnerable fields like
transportation/logistics, production labor, and administrative support. Jobs
in services, sales, and construction may also be lost in this first stage.
Then, the rate of replacement will slow down due to bottlenecks in
harder-to-automate fields such engineering. This "technological plateau"
will be followed by a second wave of computerization, dependent upon the
development of good artificial intelligence. This could next put jobs in
management, science and engineering, and the arts at risk.

The authors note that the rate of computerization depends on several other
factors, including regulation of new technology and access to cheap labor.

These results were calculated with a common statistical modeling method.
More than 700 jobs on O*Net, an online career network, were considered, as
well as the skills and education required for each. These features were
weighted according to how automatable they were, and according to the
engineering obstacles currently preventing computerization.

"Our findings thus imply that as technology races ahead, low-skill workers
will reallocate to tasks that are non-susceptible to computerization-i.e.,
tasks that required creative and social intelligence," the authors write.
"For workers to win the race, however, they will have to acquire creative
and social skills."



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