Postagem em destaque

373∆24 Brasil and the world in crisis (draft)

    Temas: Brasil and the world in crisis  ( draft ) Sumário: Miríade e Distopia   (2004-2024)  Em construção: Coletânea de Poesias -   draf...

sexta-feira, 17 de setembro de 2021

 

Study: As a population gets older, automation accelerates

 

"

In Germany, robots have entered the workplace more to compensate for the absence of workers; 

in the U.S., relatively more robot adoption has displaced a slightly younger workforce."

"companies’ adoption of robots is partly due to shortages in middle-aged labor."

"We provide a lot of evidence to bolster the case that this is a , and it is driven by precisely the industries that are most affected by aging and have opportunities for automating work," Acemoglu adds.

 
 PRESS INQUIRIES
aging workers
Caption:
MIT economist Daron Acemoglu is co-author of a new study showing that aging populations lead to greater implementation of robots in workplace settings.
Credits:
Image: Digital collage by Jose-Luis Olivares, MIT, with images from iStockphoto


Companies' adoption of robots is partly due to shortages in middle-aged labor

Automation
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

You might think robots and other forms of workplace automation gain traction due to intrinsic advances in technology—that innovations naturally find their way into the economy. But a study co-authored by an MIT professor tells a different story: Robots are more widely adopted where populations become notably older, filling the gaps in an aging industrial work force.

"Demographic change—aging—is one of the most important factors leading to the adoption of robotics and other  technologies," says Daron Acemoglu, an MIT economist and co-author of a new paper detailing the results of the study.

The study finds that when it comes to the adoption of robots, aging alone accounts for 35 percent of the variation among countries. Within the U.S., the research shows the same pattern: Metro areas where the population is getting older at a faster rate are the places where industry invests more in robots.

[Why not invest more on immigrants training and qualification?]

"We provide a lot of evidence to bolster the case that this is a , and it is driven by precisely the industries that are most affected by aging and have opportunities for automating work," Acemoglu adds.

The paper, "Demographics and Automation," has been published online by The Review of Economic Studies, and will be appearing in a forthcoming print edition of the journal. The authors are Acemoglu, an Institute Professor at MIT, and Pascual Restrepo Ph.D. '16, an assistant professor of economics at Boston University.

An 'amazing frontier,' but driven by labor shortages

The current study is the latest in a series of papers Acemoglu and Restrepo have published about
automation,
robots, and the
workforce.

They have previously 

    quantified job displacement in the U.S. due to robots, 

    looked at the firm-level effects of  use, and 

    identified the late 1980s as a key moment when automation started replacing more jobs than it was creating.

This study involves multiple layers of demographic, technological, and industry-level data, largely from the early 1990s through the mid-2010s. First, Acemoglu and Restrepo found a strong relationship between 

    an aging work force—defined by the ratio of workers 56 and older to those ages 21 to 55—and 

    robot deployment in 60 countries. 

Aging alone accounted for not only 35 percent of the variation in robot use among countries, but also 20 percent of the variation in imports of robots, the researchers found.

Other  involving particular countries also stand out. South Korea has been the country both aging most rapidly and implementing robotics most extensively. And Germany's relatively older population accounts for 80 percent of the difference in robot implementation between that country and the U.S.

Overall, Acemoglu says, "Our findings suggest that quite a bit of investment in robotics is not driven by the fact that this is the next 'amazing frontier," but because
 

some countries have shortages of labor, especially middle-aged labor that would be necessary for blue-collar work."

Digging into a wide variety of industry-level data across 129 countries, Acemoglu and Restrepo concluded that what holds for robots also applies to other, nonrobotic types of automation.

"We find the same thing when we look at other automation technologies, such as numerically controlled machinery or automated machine tools," Acemoglu says. Significantly, at the same time, he observes, "We do not find similar relationships when we look at nonautomated machinery, for example nonautomated machine tools or things such as computers."

The research likely sheds light on larger-scale trends as well. In recent decades, workers have fared better economically in Germany than in the U.S. The current research suggests there is a difference between 

- adopting automation in response to labor shortages, as opposed to 

- adopting automation as a cost-cutting, worker-replacing strategy. 

In Germany, robots have entered the workplace more to compensate for the absence of workers; in the U.S., relatively more robot adoption has displaced a slightly younger workforce.

"This is a potential explanation for why South Korea, Japan, and Germany—the leaders in robot investment and the most rapidly aging countries in the world—have not seen labor market outcomes [as bad] as those in the U.S.," Acemoglu notes.


https://www.statista.com/statistics/227005/unemployment-rate-in-germany/

 

Back in the U.S.

Having examined demographics and robot usage globally, Acemoglu and Restrepo applied the same techniques to studying automation in the roughly 700 "commuting zones" (essentially, metro areas) in the U.S. from 1990 to 2015, while controlling for factors like the industrial composition of the local economy and labor trends.

Overall, the same global trend also applied within the U.S.: Older workforce populations saw greater adoption of robots after 1990. Specifically, the study found that a 10-percentage-point increase in local population aging led to a 6.45 -percentage-point increase in presence of robot "integrators" in the area—firms specializing in installing and maintaining industrial robots.

The study's data sources included population and economic statistics from multiple United Nations sources, including the UN Comtrade data on international economic activity; technology and industry data from the International Federation of Robotics; and U.S. demographic and economic statistics from multiple government sources. On top of their other layers of analysis, Acemoglu and Restrepo also studied patent data and found a "strong association" between aging and patents in automation, as Acemoglu puts it. "Which makes sense," he adds.

For their part, Acemoglu and Restrepo are continuing to look at the effects of artificial intelligence on the workforce, and to research the relationship between workplace automation and economic inequality.

quinta-feira, 16 de setembro de 2021

 

Political orientation predicts science denial – here’s what that means for getting Americans vaccinated against COVID-19

Professor of Philosophy, Wake Forest University

The rejection of scientific expertise with regard to COVID-19 vaccines appears to be standing in for something else. As a philosopher who has studied science denial, I suggest that this “something else” includes factors like distrust in public institutions and perceived threats to one’s cultural identity.


Indeed, social scientists looking at the causes of science denial have increasingly narrowed in on two contributing causes.

 Certain personality traits, including 

    - comfort with existing social and cultural hierarchies and 

    - a predilection for authoritarianism, 

go along with a skepticism for science. 

So do closely related aspects of identity, such as 

   - identification with a dominant social group like white evangelical Christians.


One school of thought in psychology, called compensatory control theory, holds that many social phenomena – including ideological science denial – stem from the basic human need for a sense of control over one’s environment and life outcomes. According to this theory, perceived threats to one’s sense of personal control can motivate denial of scientific consensus. The idea is that due to a combination of 

- economic insecurity, 

- demographic changes and the 

- perceived erosion of cultural norms favoring whites, 

some people feel an existential threat to the white supremacy they’ve long benefited from – which in turn spurs them to deny government warnings about the dangers of COVID-19.

I believe this compulsive defensiveness plays a big part in the phenomenon of science denial, once trusted elites like politicians or news media hosts trigger the inclination to oppose some particular science-based public policy. 

You can’t control 

    the coronavirus – or 

    inequality, or a 

    changing culture – 

but you can control 

    whether you 

    take the vaccine or 

    wear a mask. 

This sense of control is implicitly but powerfully attractive on a deep, emotional level.


Denial feeds on political polarization

As I discuss in my book, “The Truth About Denial,” I think that science denial, including COVID-19 vaccine denial, is probably best seen as the result of vicious feedback loops. Factors like 

    economic pain, 

    white Christian identity and 

    low social trust 

play off one another in populations experiencing relative social and informational isolation. This denialism can take hold more easily in people who have chosen to limit their experiences to relatively homogeneous geographic areas, social contexts and news media environments.


https://theconversation.com/political-orientation-predicts-science-denial-heres-what-that-means-for-getting-americans-vaccinated-against-covid-19-165386