Robots to affect up to 30% of UK jobs, says PwC
Robotics and artificial intelligence could affect almost a third of UK jobs by the 2030s, according to a study.
However, the report from accountancy firm PwC also predicted that the nature of some occupations would change rather than disappear.
It added that automation could create more wealth and additional jobs elsewhere in the economy.
Jobs in manufacturing and retail were among the most at risk from the new technologies, the report said.
The study estimated that 30% of existing jobs in the UK were potentially at a high risk of automation, compared with 38% in the US, 35% in Germany and 21% in Japan.
John Hawksworth, chief economist at PwC, told the BBC that "more manual, routine jobs" which "can effectively be programmed" were the most at risk.
"Jobs where you've got more of a human touch, like health and education," would be safer, he said.
Under threat
The use of robots in the workplace is rising with workers in some sectors already facing up to the potential challenges.
"You can already see on the railways that all these strikes are not unrelated to the move towards driverless trains," Mr Hawksworth said.
In the future, truck drivers might "job share" with a self-driving lorry, although even that might ultimately be under threat, he said.
"Ultimately, people are going to have to be more adaptable," he added.
The government should help by providing lower-skill workers with more training in the next 10 to 20 years, the report said.
However, it also concluded that gains in productivity from robots and Artificial Intelligence (AI) would boost the economy.
"In many ways automation is a good thing. It's going to boost productivity, a big problem for the UK recently, and increase incomes... which will increase demand for human jobs in other areas," Mr Hawksworth said.
The UK is near record-low levels of unemployment and so outsourcing more repetitive tasks to robots could free up people to do more valuable work, the report found.
Which jobs are most at risk?
Transportation and storage - 56% of jobs at high risk from automation
Manufacturing - 46%
Wholesale and retail trade - 44%
Administrative and support services - 37%
Financial and insurance - 32%
Professional, scientific and technical - 26%
Construction - 24%
Arts and entertainment - 22%
Agriculture, forestry and fishing - 19%
Human health and social work - 17%
The use of robots in the workplace is rising with workers in some sectors already facing up to the potential challenges.
"You can already see on the railways that all these strikes are not unrelated to the move towards driverless trains," Mr Hawksworth said.
In the future, truck drivers might "job share" with a self-driving lorry, although even that might ultimately be under threat, he said.
"Ultimately, people are going to have to be more adaptable," he added.
The government should help by providing lower-skill workers with more training in the next 10 to 20 years, the report said.
However, it also concluded that gains in productivity from robots and Artificial Intelligence (AI) would boost the economy.
"In many ways automation is a good thing. It's going to boost productivity, a big problem for the UK recently, and increase incomes... which will increase demand for human jobs in other areas," Mr Hawksworth said.
The UK is near record-low levels of unemployment and so outsourcing more repetitive tasks to robots could free up people to do more valuable work, the report found.
Which jobs are most at risk?
Transportation and storage - 56% of jobs at high risk from automation
Manufacturing - 46%
Wholesale and retail trade - 44%
Administrative and support services - 37%
Financial and insurance - 32%
Professional, scientific and technical - 26%
Construction - 24%
Arts and entertainment - 22%
Agriculture, forestry and fishing - 19%
Human health and social work - 17%
Education - 9%
Source: BBC Business
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