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ANALYSIS

TECHNOLOGY

THE INVESTOR

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23

30,000 robots.‘It currently has just

10,000,’ she says,‘and has meanwhile taken

on an additional 100,000 human workers.

‘Jobs will only disappear when

businesses invest in computerised

equipment. History provides many

examples of technologies spreading slowly

because the old ones remain profitable,

because additional investment is needed,

or because there are other barriers to

achieving the necessary level of investment.’

That is not to underestimate the need

to prepare workforces for automation,

however. Professor Coyle believes that

governments must focus on education.

‘An obvious requirement is for more and

better education.This may sound banal

but little has been accomplished, despite

the fact that the policy world has been

talking about the need to improve

education for more than a decade.Most

European countries have systems that

deliver an elite with high cognitive skills.

‘The need now is to focus education and

training on non-routine – cognitive and

non-cognitive – skills that will ensure

people are able to complement, rather

than be substituted by, newmachines.’

1, 2

https://deepmind.com

, March 2016

3

www.mooreslaw.org

,April 2016

4

www.intorobotics.com

, July 2015

5

www.bofaml.com

,April 2015

6

www2.deloitte.com

, January 2016

7 www.whitehouse.gov, February 2016

8

www.bankofengland.co.uk,

November 2015

Moore’s Lawholds that

the processing power

of computers doubles

every two years

Balance sheet

The rise of big data could see a ‘robot

revolution’, potentially putting jobs traditionally carried

out by humans at risk of automation.