One of the articles we read for this week, entitled “The 4
Technology Trends That Could Bring Back U.S. Manufacturing (And Innovation),
documented four different ways that the author felt that America could return
to not only innovating but also manufacturing their goods. The article
mentioned additive manufacturing, the impact of shale gas, continuous
manufacturing, and, something I found particularly interesting, robotics in
place of human labor.
According
to a study released by MIT, seven of the top 10 “robotic” countries have decreased
in manufacturing employment since 2009, and 9 of the 10 saw drastic increases
in robots per 1,000 manufacturing workers. All 10 countries saw worsened impacts on manufacturing employment when compared to impact on the robot:worker ratio[1].
This
trend in robotics in the workforce, when coupled with recent developments in
demand for moderately skilled workers, can create a lot of trouble for a large
class of American workers today. Harvard economics professor, Lawrence Katz,
explains a phenomenon he calls “hollowing out”, which essentially represents
that direct decrease in jobs for “middle skill” jobs due to technology while
higher skilled and lower skilled jobs remain less targeted [2]. ]. Moreover, a study performed at
Oxford University by Carl Frey and Michael Osbourne predicts that a whopping
47% of United States jobs are at risk from automation [2].
After reading all of this information, I feel that there are
definite benefits to robotics from a manufacturing perspective. Aside from the
obvious perks of having extremely efficient machines handling tasks and
minimizing any chance of human error, it even alleviates any company from
concerns of laborers being overworked or in poor conditions. That being said, I
also feel that there should be a corporate responsibility to ensure that the
human work force in the United States is being given ample opportunity to bring
innovation to life. Regulations on robot and human proportions in manufacturing
plants could help to balance the utility of robotics and offer career
opportunities for civilians.
Now that the unemployment rate in the United States has
finally started falling again, should there be limitations placed on the robots
per amount of workers ratio? Will employers feel the ethical ramifications of
phasing out human labor supply or will the appeal of standardizable, efficient,
and never tired automated workforces eventually win out?
[1] http://www.technologyreview.com/graphiti/529971/robots-rising/
[2] http://robohub.org/the-economic-impact-of-the-robotic-revolution/
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