Artificial intelligence, automation and work

"We summarize a framework for the study of the implications of automation and AI on the demand for labor, wages, and employment. Our task-based framework emphasizes the displacement effect that automation creates as machines and AI replace labor in tasks that it used to perform. This displaceme...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, Acemoglu, Daron, Restrepo, Pascual
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, MA 2018
NBER
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19399080124911172629-artificial-intelligence,-autom.htm
_version_ 1771659902320640000
author National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge
Acemoglu, Daron
Restrepo, Pascual
author_facet National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge
Acemoglu, Daron
Restrepo, Pascual
collection Library items
description "We summarize a framework for the study of the implications of automation and AI on the demand for labor, wages, and employment. Our task-based framework emphasizes the displacement effect that automation creates as machines and AI replace labor in tasks that it used to perform. This displacement effect tends to reduce the demand for labor and wages. But it is counteracted by a productivity effect, resulting from the cost savings generated by automation, which increase the demand for labor in non-automated tasks. The productivity effect is complemented by additional capital accumulation and the deepening of automation (improvements of existing machinery), both of which further increase the demand for labor. These countervailing effects are incomplete. Even when they are strong, automation in- creases output per worker more than wages and reduce the share of labor in national income. The more powerful countervailing force against automation is the creation of new labor-intensive tasks, which reinstates labor in new activities and tends to increase the labor share to counterbalance the impact of automation. Our framework also highlights the constraints and imperfections that slow down the adjustment of the economy and the labor market to automation and weaken the resulting productivity gains from this transformation: a mismatch between the skill requirements of new technologies, and the possibility that automation is being introduced at an excessive rate, possibly at the expense of other productivity-enhancing technologies."
format TEXT
id 19399080124911172629_98bf2a53d14c4cb78cd844092be35561
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19399080124911172629_98bf2a53d14c4cb78cd844092be35561
is_hierarchy_title Artificial intelligence, automation and work
language English
physical 43 p.
Digital
publishDate 2018
publisher Cambridge, MA
NBER
spellingShingle National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge
Acemoglu, Daron
Restrepo, Pascual
digitalisation
work
wages
employment
Artificial intelligence, automation and work
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=133081395126
title Artificial intelligence, automation and work
topic digitalisation
work
wages
employment
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19399080124911172629-artificial-intelligence,-autom.htm