In this literary review, I examine the nature of technological change, specifically automation, and its effects on employment and wages. My goal is to examine the question: “Will automation inevitably lead to labour becoming obsolete as a means of production?” I begin by introducing recent empirical observations that are mainly believed to be caused by increased automation, such as the decline in the labour share of income and the polarization of employment by skill-level. Following this I attempt to acquire a better understanding of the matter through the relatively recently introduced economic theory of task-based models. These models have replaced the Canonical model, which was based on factor-augmenting technological change, and are cur...
Through a series of studies, the overarching aim of this book is to investigate if and how the digit...
Automation and technical innovation are currently shaping global labour markets. Research on the fut...
Warnings about technology displacing workers from their jobs are not new. In the early 19th century ...
The crucial question to ask in the age of automation is whether this time will be different (Ford, 2...
associéInternational audienceWe study the projected impact of automation on employment in the forthc...
We study the projected impact of automation on employment in the forthcoming decade, both at the mac...
Technological progress has been the catalyst behind the increases in living standards across time. O...
The future of work is one of increasing precarity and uncertainty. The continued implementation of a...
Advancing technologies are increasingly able to fully or partially automate job tasks. These technol...
International audienceShould we fear or welcome automation? On the one hand, fear may prevail if we ...
The changes in the labour market will affect almost all of us somehow in the future. In European Uni...
The progress made in the field of robotics and artificial intelligence, the rise of the Internet of ...
Alternative perspectives from economics and political economy now agree that work is set to disappea...
We present a framework for understanding the effects of automation and other types of technological ...
Will robotization lead to unemployment? What will be the society-wide impact of automation? Will it ...
Through a series of studies, the overarching aim of this book is to investigate if and how the digit...
Automation and technical innovation are currently shaping global labour markets. Research on the fut...
Warnings about technology displacing workers from their jobs are not new. In the early 19th century ...
The crucial question to ask in the age of automation is whether this time will be different (Ford, 2...
associéInternational audienceWe study the projected impact of automation on employment in the forthc...
We study the projected impact of automation on employment in the forthcoming decade, both at the mac...
Technological progress has been the catalyst behind the increases in living standards across time. O...
The future of work is one of increasing precarity and uncertainty. The continued implementation of a...
Advancing technologies are increasingly able to fully or partially automate job tasks. These technol...
International audienceShould we fear or welcome automation? On the one hand, fear may prevail if we ...
The changes in the labour market will affect almost all of us somehow in the future. In European Uni...
The progress made in the field of robotics and artificial intelligence, the rise of the Internet of ...
Alternative perspectives from economics and political economy now agree that work is set to disappea...
We present a framework for understanding the effects of automation and other types of technological ...
Will robotization lead to unemployment? What will be the society-wide impact of automation? Will it ...
Through a series of studies, the overarching aim of this book is to investigate if and how the digit...
Automation and technical innovation are currently shaping global labour markets. Research on the fut...
Warnings about technology displacing workers from their jobs are not new. In the early 19th century ...