Understanding Technological Unemployment: A Review of Causes, Consequences, and Solutions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- RQ 1. What are the causes of technological unemployment?
- RQ 2. What are the consequences of technological unemployment?
- RQ 3. Which solutions to technological unemployment are being proposed?
- RQ 4. What is the research agenda for technological unemployment?
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
- Causes: what factors cause or accelerate technological unemployment?
- Consequences: what are the consequences caused by technological unemployment?
- Solutions: what are the actions that could mitigate either the causes or the negative consequences of technological unemployment?
- Research agenda: which opportunities for future research are indicated by the authors?
- Technological Oligopoly: USA and China lead the technology development that will provoke worldwide labor displacement in the near future [28]. Companies such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, IBM, and Microsoft (in the US) and Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent (in China) invest heavily in AI technology [29]. These profit-maximizing practices bring economic benefits to the US and China [31] but ignore that developing countries have to deal with its negative consequences, such as technological unemployment [28];
- Outdated International Tax Systems: The international tax system is slow to solve problems related to the digitalized world, especially inequalities between economically developing and developed countries [28];
- Skills Mismatch: Digital technologies are changing faster than organizations and workers’ skills can keep pace [35]. Automation is eroding the demand for human skills in the middle range while increasing skill demand for high and low skills [32]. Finally, if the technology change becomes exponential, workers might be unable to retrain their skills fast enough [3];
- Inadequate Tax Systems: The current tax system charges labor more than capital, stimulating automation since considerably less tax is collected per amount produced by automated processes [36]. The tax system can be used to invert such stimulus by charging more for automated production or providing tax exemptions for “humanized” production [4].
- Increased Inequality: Technological unemployment may increase new forms of inequalities, such as the skill-based divide, due to different levels of professional skills, and the digital divide, due to the lack of access to digital devices and the internet, especially in Africa and Latin America [28]. The skill-based divide can contribute to even higher wage inequality between untrained and highly qualified employees [36];
- More Free Time/Boredom: If our society becomes a leisure society, we face the risk of people being bored, demotivated, and undecided about what to accomplish [38]. Nevertheless, we could use this free time to develop better education and health care and produce personal projects, research, philosophy, and the arts [31];
- Less Demand/Consumption: A large-scale technological unemployment may distort the relationship between offer and demand. If many workers lose their jobs at the same time, the effective demand for new products will shrink [31]. This massive loss of purchasing power has the potential to collapse the economy [41].
- As regards solutions to technological unemployment, we can highlight the following:
- International Tax Cooperation: An international tax cooperation may be used to cope with technological unemployment. Its goal should be to slow down the adoption of new production methods and to finance a global UBI [28];
- New Economic Sectors: Sectors such as tourism and health care rely strongly on human interaction and may see a surge in the future as their jobs are unlikely to be automated soon [2];
- Fiscal Reform: A wide reform of the tax policy is needed, including personal and corporate taxation, since personal taxation does not reach wealthy people as it could [28]. Stronger international taxation rules, negotiated through international agreements can mitigate economic effects between the more and less-developed worlds [28]. Companies should pay taxes when they replace workers with robots [36], and staff education and retraining should produce tax incentives [28];
- Charitable Donations: Wealthy people usually donate a certain proportion of their wealth. If this trend persists, they will be increasing richer and such donations may become help mitigating the negative consequences of technological unemployment [30];
- Produce Own Goods: People might have the alternative to produce their own essential goods. It may take the form of communal farming, building, and teaching, or they may build their own AI or robot that will accomplish some of the work for them [30];
- Change Higher Education: Technological unemployment shows that higher education institutions have to change to be capable of retraining workers quickly to meet the rapidly changing needs of the workplace [2]. Thus, these institutions must offer certificates and degrees faster and more efficiently since more adults with dependents require public support during their training for a different occupation [2], which may be funded by a tax on labor-modifying technological applications [2];
- On-the-Job Corporate Retraining: On-the-job corporate retraining may be considered as worker training programs on steroids: the company teaches tailored skills to their workforce while they work. The high costs associated with the training may cause significant changes in the employer/employee contract, including temporary wage deductions or limited noncompete contract clauses if the employee leaves the firm before a specified period [2];
- Track Occupational Change: The systematic tracking of occupational change may reduce the unpredictability of the labor market, providing a faster response from the government. Such systems must use occupational statistics data to detect patterns and trends in occupational shifting, collect skill demands from sites such as LinkedIn, and tracking the hiring trends; finally, they should survey firms to collect their desired hiring skills [2];
- Change Unemployment System (Private/Public): Current unemployment compensation systems are designed to support cyclical unemployment. However, technological unemployment represents structural unemployment that can be permanent and usually requires retraining for a new occupation. Therefore, the unemployment compensation system should provide retraining aid and monthly checks to support the workers and their families during the retraining period [2]. Private unemployment insurance and personal income savings in preparation for technological unemployment may also play an important role [30].
3.1. Causes
3.2. Consequences
3.3. Solutions
3.3.1. Solutions to Causes
3.3.2. Solutions to Consequences
3.4. Research Agenda
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Philosophy and Technology | 1 |
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Subject Area | # of Papers |
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Economic | 14 |
Social | 7 |
Philosophy/Ethics | 6 |
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Lima, Y.; Barbosa, C.E.; dos Santos, H.S.; de Souza, J.M. Understanding Technological Unemployment: A Review of Causes, Consequences, and Solutions. Societies 2021, 11, 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11020050
Lima Y, Barbosa CE, dos Santos HS, de Souza JM. Understanding Technological Unemployment: A Review of Causes, Consequences, and Solutions. Societies. 2021; 11(2):50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11020050
Chicago/Turabian StyleLima, Yuri, Carlos Eduardo Barbosa, Herbert Salazar dos Santos, and Jano Moreira de Souza. 2021. "Understanding Technological Unemployment: A Review of Causes, Consequences, and Solutions" Societies 11, no. 2: 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11020050
APA StyleLima, Y., Barbosa, C. E., dos Santos, H. S., & de Souza, J. M. (2021). Understanding Technological Unemployment: A Review of Causes, Consequences, and Solutions. Societies, 11(2), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11020050