Living Lab from WCAI   /     How to Know if Robots Are Coming for Your Job

Description

Retailers like Walmart are embracing robots – here's how workers can tell if they'll be replaced Beth Humberd , University of Massachusetts Lowell and Scott F. Latham , University of Massachusetts Lowell Walmart recently said it plans to deploy robots to scan shelves, scrub floors and perform other mundane tasks in its stores as the retail giant seeks to lower labor costs . While the retail giant did not say which jobs, if any, might be lost as a result, the announcement – and the many more surely to follow at other big box retailers – begs the question: How can workers prepare for a future of increasingly automated work? Millions of today’s jobs are expected to be affected by artificial intelligence and automation as part of the “ fourth industrial revolution .” But just which occupations are most at risk has been a guessing game among economists, futurists and scholars trying to predict winners and losers . As experts on workers’ identities and careers and industry and technological

Summary

Retailers like Walmart are embracing robots – here's how workers can tell if they'll be replaced Beth Humberd , University of Massachusetts Lowell and Scott F. Latham , University of Massachusetts Lowell Walmart recently said it plans to deploy robots to scan shelves, scrub floors and perform other mundane tasks in its stores as the retail giant seeks to lower labor costs . While the retail giant did not say which jobs, if any, might be lost as a result, the announcement – and the many more

Subtitle
Retailers like Walmart are embracing robots – here's how workers can tell if they'll be replaced Beth Humberd , University of Massachusetts Lowell and Scott F. Latham , University of Massachusetts Lowell Walmart recently said it plans to deploy robots
Duration
856
Publishing date
2019-04-28 16:08
Link
https://www.capeandislands.org/post/how-know-if-robots-are-coming-your-job
Contributors
  Heather Goldstone
author  
Enclosures
https://cpa.ds.npr.org/wcai/audio/2019/04/LL042919a.mp3
audio/mpeg