The age of automation, and on the near horizon, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, offer new job opportunit... Show more
The age of automation, and on the near horizon, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, offer new job opportunities and avenues for economic advancement but women face new challenges overlaid on long-established ones. Between 40 million and 160 million women globally may need to transition between occupations by 2030, often into higher-skilled roles. This research argues that, to weather this disruption, women (and men) need to be skilled, mobile, and tech-savvy but women face pervasive barriers on each, and will need targeted support to move forward in the world of work. The research finds that if women make these transitions, they could be on the path to more productive, better-paid work. If they cannot, they could face a growing wage gap or be left further behind when progress toward gender parity in work is already slow.
This new research explores potential patterns in 'jobs lost' (jobs displaced by automation), 'jobs gained' (job creation driven by economic growth, investment, demographic changes, and technological innovation), and 'jobs changed' (jobs whose activities and skill requirements change from partial automation) for women by exploring several scenarios of how automation adoption and job creation trends could play out by 2030 for men and women given current gender patterns in the global workforce. These scenarios are not meant to predict the future; rather, they serve as a tool to understand a range of possible outcomes and identify interventions needed. The term jobs is used as shorthand for full-time-equivalent workers. The research examines six mature economies (Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States) and four emerging economies (China, India, Mexico, and South Africa), which together account for around half of the world's population and about 60 per cent of global GDP.
Edited excerpts from publisher's website.
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Authors:
Madgavkar, Anu; Manyika, James; Krishnan, Mekala; Ellingrud, Kweilin ... [+] Show more
Madgavkar, Anu;
Manyika, James;
Krishnan, Mekala;
Ellingrud, Kweilin;
Yee, Lareina;
Woetzel, Jonathan;
Chui, Michael;
Hunt, Vivian;
Balakrishnan, Sruti [-] Show less
Date: 2019
Geographic subjects:
Canada; France; Germany ... [+] Show more
Canada;
France;
Germany;
Japan;
Great Britain;
United States;
China;
India;
Mexico;
South Africa;
Africa;
North America;
Asia;
Europe [-] Show less
Resource type: Report, paper or authored book
Subjects:
Gender; Technology; Employment ... [+] Show more
Gender;
Technology;
Employment;
Industry;
Participation;
Equity;
Skills and knowledge [-] Show less