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China says robots and AI won’t lead to “significant” loss of jobs

 

A government report suggests a robot tax to help disadvantaged workers

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Hotel service robots on display at CES in Shanghai in June 2019. (Picture: Bloomberg)
This article originally appeared on ABACUS

There has long been a debate on whether robots will end up putting a large part of the population out of work. Now China says that AI and automation will indeed replace some jobs, but it won’t be as damaging as feared.

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That’s according to a report published this week by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a national think tank. It says that during China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, which starts in 2021, the rise of robots will not lead to “significant” job destruction.

The state-run People’s Daily, citing the report, says low-skilled workers won’t be directly rendered obsolete -- but will instead be transferred to other jobs.
Hotel service robots on display at CES in Shanghai in June 2019. (Picture: Bloomberg)
Hotel service robots on display at CES in Shanghai in June 2019. (Picture: Bloomberg)

Driven to become one of the world’s strongest manufacturing powers by 2020 while facing the pressure of an aging population, China has been developing and adopting robots in different industries.

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Ecommerce companies including Alibaba and JD.com have automated some of their warehouses and deployed delivery robots.

(Abacus is a unit of the South China Morning Post, which is owned by Alibaba.)

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