Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots

IANS, 08 Oct, 2016 04:46 PM
    Automation threatens 69% of jobs in India, 77% in China, according to a World Bank research which says that technology could fundamentally disrupt the pattern of traditional economic paths in developing countries.
     
    "As we continue to encourage more investment in infrastructure to promote growth, we also have to think about the kinds of infrastructure that countries will need in the economy of the future. We all know that technology has and will continue to fundamentally reshape the world," World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said.
     
    "But the traditional economic path from increasing productivity of agriculture to light manufacturing and then to full-scale industrialisation may not be possible for all developing countries," Kim said in response to a question at the Brookings Institute during a discussion on extreme poverty yesterday.
     
    "In large parts of Africa, it is likely that technology could fundamentally disrupt this pattern. Research based on World Bank data has predicted that the proportion of jobs threatened in India by automation is 69%, in China it is 77% and in Ethiopia, the percentage of jobs threatened by automation is 85%," he said.
     
     
    "Now, if this is true, and if these countries are going to lose these many jobs, we then have to understand what paths to economic growth will be available for these countries and then adapt our approach to infrastructure accordingly," Kim said.
     
    He said one child policy could have been reason of sharp decline in child stunting and malnutrition, which is now at 10%.
     
    "The one child policy could have been part of it, but anyway the point is, that if you look at educational outcomes and things like child stunting, India is at 38.7% child stunting, they are literally walking into the future with 40% of their workforce probably being unable to compete in the global digital economy, whereas China over the years has brought it down very, very low," Kim said.
     
    "In India, it is probably partly because of sanitation that children are often in a just constant diarrheal stage, because of open defecation. There is a lot of different pieces of it. But I have been saying to the leaders of these countries that have these high stunting rates, there is like an emergency for you, you have got to tackle it," Kim said

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Want a better deal? Try monkey as your shopping partner

    Want a better deal? Try monkey as your shopping partner
    Monkeys are smarter than humans when it comes to shopping as they do not confuse the price tag of a good with its quality, an interesting study from...

    Want a better deal? Try monkey as your shopping partner

    Reading animal emotions key to their better welfare

    Reading animal emotions key to their better welfare
    Understanding how animals express emotions during mildly positive or negative situations could lead to their better welfare, researchers say....

    Reading animal emotions key to their better welfare

    Where Whisky And Whiskey Are Worlds Apart

    Where Whisky And Whiskey Are Worlds Apart
    There is a world of difference between what India, the world's largest whisky drinking nation, cheers with and what connoisseurs call the American 'whiskey' spelt with an 'e', for starters.

    Where Whisky And Whiskey Are Worlds Apart

    Man Allows Himself To Be Swallowed Alive By Anaconda

    Man Allows Himself To Be Swallowed Alive By Anaconda
    In a shocking act, an American naturalist allowed himself to be swallowed alive by an anaconda in the Amazon forest....

    Man Allows Himself To Be Swallowed Alive By Anaconda

    Genes link criminality and intelligence

    Genes link criminality and intelligence
    Data collected from over one million Swedish men shows that sons whose fathers have criminal records tend to have lower intelligence than sons ...

    Genes link criminality and intelligence

    Human eye can see 'invisible' infrared light

    Human eye can see 'invisible' infrared light
    In a first, an international team of researchers has found that under certain conditions, our eye can sense “invisible” infra-red light....

    Human eye can see 'invisible' infrared light