Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Future of work shows promise but also inequality

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2022 01:51 PM
  • Future of work shows promise but also inequality

VANCOUVER - Some economists say a rise in automation that was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic is a healthy part of the evolution of technology, while Statistics Canada warns of rising inequality.

Giovanni Gallipoli, a professor at the University of B.C., says advancements in technology are a natural part of an economy's growth that shouldn't be feared.

While they can mean job losses in the short term, they typically result in overall increases in wealth and new jobs in the longer term, he said.

"Technological evolution ... results in wealth improvement for the vast majority of people. And even for those who lose, in the long term there is an ability to convert to new occupations, to new jobs, to perform new tasks," Gallipoli said.

But in a two-year report on COVID-19, Statistics Canada warns the longer-lasting impacts of the pandemic on work are likely to increase inequality.

It identifies resistance to automation as one of three measures of job stability. The others are having permanent work and a job that can recover quickly from the pandemic.

High earners with more education are significantly more likely to hold protected jobs than low-income and less educated people, the figures show.

Couples in the top 10 per cent of earnings distribution were 20 times more likely to have protected jobs than those in the bottom 10 per cent. And couples with post-secondary degrees were seven per cent more likely to hold them than couples without those credentials, the report says.

At the same time, employment in sectors like technical and scientific services with high levels of job flexibility and telework capacity grew, while employment sank in lower-paying jobs involving high contact with the public like hospitality.

Joel Bilt, an economist at the University of Waterloo, said efforts to slow innovation can put the economy at a competitive disadvantage.

However, he said there are ways to minimize the damage. They range from stronger tax policies to social programs and retraining opportunities for those whose jobs are vulnerable, Bilt said.

"The churn in jobs and the number of times people are going to have to reinvent themselves and change careers is probably going to be rising as we get more disruptive technologies, so we need to be able to retrain people quickly, efficiently," he said.

As new technologies generate wealth, the question is how to ensure everyone benefits, not just a few, he said.

"At a high level, the answer is we need to double down on social programs and the social safety net needs to be adequate."

The BC Federation of Labour, which represents more than half a million workers in B.C., recommends governments ensure there are no barriers to unionization in the changing labour market.

It recommends increasing workers' protections fromand control over technological changes in the workplace and supporting them with educational opportunities, affordable housing and other public services.

In a September 2020 report, the union said 60 per cent of the province's labour force faces either high or medium likelihood of having their job impacted by automation in the next 20 years, adding that the technology threatens to increase precarious employment.

It also predicted rising inequality, with more newly created jobs excluded from existing unions’ contractual jurisdictions, while education and retraining expenses can be prohibitive for many.

"The capacities and potential of modern automation represent a fundamental restructuring of the labour environment unlike any before it, and we must determine whom this restructuring will serve," the report says.

MORE National ARTICLES

782 COVID19 cases for Thursday

782 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There are 744 individuals hospitalized with COVID-19 and 120 are in intensive care. In the past 24 hours, five new deaths have been reported, for an overall total of 2,781.

782 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Coquitlam RCMP want the rightful owner of cash found to come and claim it

Coquitlam RCMP want the rightful owner of cash found to come and claim it
Did you accidentally drop a significant amount of cash in the 400-block of Schoolhouse Street? Coquitlam RCMP is asking the rightful owner to come forward. On February 9, 2021, someone was walking near the 400-block of Schoolhouse Street, Coquitlam when they dropped a large sum of cash.

Coquitlam RCMP want the rightful owner of cash found to come and claim it

2,000 Indian students scammed as 3 Canadian colleges shut after bankruptcy

2,000 Indian students scammed as 3 Canadian colleges shut after bankruptcy
Over 2,000 Indian students, who face an uncertain future after three Montreal colleges closed last month by declaring bankruptcy, have demanded intervention by the Canadian government to give them justice. The CCSQ College, M. College, and CDE College had collected millions of dollars in tuition fees from these students before closing.

2,000 Indian students scammed as 3 Canadian colleges shut after bankruptcy

Tories name leadership race rules-makers

Tories name leadership race rules-makers
The party's constitution requires the creation of a committee to determine the rules and procedures to be used as members prepare to select a permanent replacement for Erin O'Toole.

Tories name leadership race rules-makers

Feds offer cities aid for transit shortfalls

Feds offer cities aid for transit shortfalls
Provinces must match the funding, and work with cities to more quickly increase the supply of housing. Freeland says municipalities need the financial help to manage the economic repercussions of the pandemic and maintain transit systems.

Feds offer cities aid for transit shortfalls

Flag a collective symbol with individual meaning

Flag a collective symbol with individual meaning
Canadians might not be known as fervent flag wavers like their U.S. neighbours, but the Maple Leaf’s display at protests on Parliament Hill and at border crossings has given some people pause, said Carmen Celestini, a post-doctoral fellow with the Disinformation Project at Simon Fraser University's school of communication in Burnaby, B.C.    

Flag a collective symbol with individual meaning