More than half of jobs in manufacturing and transportation could be automated over the next 20 years, according to Oxford Economics.
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Millions of American jobs face automation pressure as robots move beyond factories
About 20 percent of jobs throughout the U.S. economy are in the high vulnerability category, according to Nico Palesch, a senior economist of Oxford Economics, claiming that the technology to handle ...
Developments in robotics mean it’s only a matter of time before AI-powered machines can repair pipes, operate bulldozers and prepare food — creating a host of new potential policy problems for ...
Generative AI is rapidly transforming software and other white-collar services. But an even larger disruption may be building ...
Comparisons and competitiveness among employees have been around as long as there have been workplaces. But those frictions are taking fresh shape as the use of artificial intelligence and robotics ...
A new report from Oxford Economics says around 20 percent of American jobs are highly vulnerable to automation.
Counting warehouse stock used to be a massive time sink. Now a single robot scans it fast, and the company says workers were ...
Robots don't pay into Social Security. Maybe we should tax them instead. Robots are deeply embedded in corporate America. The basic construct of Social Security is this: Workers and their employers ...
There's a reason you've never heard of a Model T tax. No one proposed a levy on the cotton gin or a fine for using computers. America's prosperity came from embracing innovation, not taxing it. Now ...
DETROIT — President Donald Trump wants to see a resurgence of manufacturing jobs in the United States under his tariff policies — but many of the factory roles of the future will ultimately be filled ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results