Workers believe personal skills will remain in demand despite automation

Georgeta Gheorghe 13/09/2017 | 12:45

According to a survey by PwC, workers believe that personal skills will remain in demand despite automation. However, most of them are willing to learn new skills in order to adapt to the paradigm shift.

Almost three quarters (74 percent) of people surveyed by PwC are ready to learn a new skill or completely retrain to keep themselves employable, seeing it as their personal responsibility and not that of employers, to keep their skills updated.

The report examines four worlds of work in 2030, to show how competing forces, including automation, are shaping the workforces of the future. Each scenario has huge implications for the world of work, which cannot be ignored by governments, organisations or individuals.

The majority of respondents believe technology will improve their job prospects (65 percent) although workers in the US (73 percent) and India (88 percent) are more confident, than those in the UK (40 percent) and Germany (48 percent).  Overall, nearly three quarters believe technology will never replace the human mind (73 percent) and the majority (86 percent) say human skills will always be in demand.

“The reality of life-long learning is biting amongst today’s workforce – no matter what age you are. The report found that 60 percent of respondents believe few people will have stable, long-term employment in the future. People are shifting from a qualification that would last a lifetime to thinking about new skills every few years, matched with ongoing development of personal skills such as risk management, leadership and emotional intelligence”, stated Ionut Simion, country managing partner, PwC Romania.

While respondents to the survey were positive about the impact of technology, with 37 percent excited about the future world of work and seeing a world full of possibilities, there is still concern that automation is putting some jobs at risk. Overall, 37 percent of respondents believe automation is putting their job at risk, up from 33 percent in 2014. And over half (56 percent) think governments should take action needed to protect jobs from automation.

“Anxiety kills confidence and the willingness to innovate. With a third of workers worried about the future of their jobs due to automation, employers need to be having mature conversations now, to include workers in the technology debate. This will help them to understand, prepare and potentially upskill for any impact technology may have on their job in the future. The shift is nothing less than a fundamental transformation in the way we work, and organisations must not underestimate the change ahead”, added Oana Munteanu, senior manager, leader of the PwC Romania HR consulting services team.

The four worlds of work in 2030

The report presents four future scenarios – or worlds – for work in 2030, to demonstrate the possible outcomes that might evolve over the next ten years due to the impact of megatrends, artificial intelligence, automation and machine learning. It looks forward to examine how workforces in each of these worlds would have adapted, as well as how technology is influencing how each of the worlds function.

“The report outlines four very different worlds, each with huge implications for how we know work today. None of us can know with any certainty what the world will look like in 2030, but its likely facets of the four worlds will feature in some way and at some time. Machine learning and AI will help us do a much better job of workforce planning in the future, but we can’t sit back and wait for the future of work to happen. Those organisations and workers that understand potential futures, and what each might mean for them, and plan ahead, will be best prepared to succeed”, concluded Ionut Simion.

The findings were published as part of PwC’s latest report, Workforce of the future: the competing forces shaping 2030, which includes data obtained from a survey of 10,000 people across the UK, Germany, China, India and the US. Their views reinforce a shift to continuous learning while earning, so employees can keep up with technology’s impact on jobs and the workplace.

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