12 Million Jobs Lost To Automation in Europe By 2040

A HOLD FreeRelease 2 | eTurboNews | eTN
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Written by Linda Hohnholz

Aging population, increased competition, and productivity lost due to the pandemic is accelerating the adoption of automation in Europe. Forrester forecasts that 34% of European jobs are at risk and 12 million jobs will be lost to automation across Europe-5 (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK) by 2040.

While the pandemic continues to pressure European businesses to invest more heavily and rapidly in automation, it’s not the only factor contributing to the forecasted job loss. According to Forrester’s Future of Jobs Forecast, 2020 to 2040 (Europe-5), workers with little bargaining power are most at risk of displacement, especially in countries where many are subject to casual employment contracts, including zero-hour contracts in the UK, which require no guaranteed working hours, or part-time jobs with low wages, such as “mini-jobs” in Germany.

Job losses to automation will subsequently impact European workers in wholesale, retail, transport, accommodation, food services, and leisure and hospitality on a bigger scale. Green energy and automation, however, will create 9 million new jobs in Europe-5 by 2040, specifically in clean energy, clean buildings, and smart cities.

Key findings include:

•             Europe’s aging population is a demographic time bomb. By 2050, Europe-5 will have 30 million fewer people of working age than in 2020. European businesses need to embrace automation to help fill the gaps of an aging workforce. 

•             Increasing productivity and improving remote work is a top priority. Countries including France, Germany, Italy, and Spain — where industry, construction, and agriculture provide a larger share of their economies — are investing more in industrial automation to increase productivity. 

•             The strict definition of a job is starting to break down. Rather than looking at automation as a substitute for a job, European organisations are starting to assess both people and machine skills when executing different tasks, including managing, and updating HR systems or designing training programmes. While jobs will be lost, jobs will also be gained and transformed as new skills become desirable. 

•             Mid-skill labour jobs that consist of simple, routine tasks are most at risk from automation. Routine jobs make up 38% of the workforce in Germany, 34% of the workforce in France, and 31% of the workforce in the UK; 49 million jobs in Europe-5 are at risk from automation. As a result, European organisations will invest in low-carbon jobs and build employees’ skill sets. Soft skills such as active learning, resilience, stress tolerance, and flexibility — something robots aren’t known for — will complement worker automation tasks and become more desirable.

About the author

Avatar of Linda Hohnholz

Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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