The Automatability of Male and Female Jobs: Technological Unemployment, Skill Shift, and Precarious Work
The Automatability of Male and Female Jobs: Technological Unemployment, Skill Shift, and Precarious Work
Author(s): Pavol Kral, Katarina Janoskova, Ivana Podhorska, Aurel Pera, Octav NegurițăSubject(s): Gender Studies
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: job automation; technological unemployment; skill shift; precarious work; migration;
Summary/Abstract: Despite the relevance of the automatability of male and female jobs, only limited research has been conducted on this topic. Using and replicating data from Brookings Institution, CNBC, IWPR, McKinsey, PIAAC, and PwC, we performed analyses and made estimates regarding share of jobs with potential high rates of automation by worker characteristics (%, across countries), the number of women and men in occupations with low and high risk of automation, and in the total workforce (2014–2018, in millions), and share of tasks that could be automated with current technologies (%). The results of a study based on collected data and estimates provide support for our research model.
Journal: Journal of Research in Gender Studies
- Issue Year: 9/2019
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 146-172
- Page Count: 7
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF