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Future of work

What are the challenges for business, governments and society?

From legal risk to the redesign of taxation systems, the impact of technology on the workplace has far-reaching consequences.

Business

According to a McKinsey survey, 66 per cent of executives see ‘addressing potential skills gaps related to automation/digitization’ within their workforces as at least a ‘top-10 priority’.

In another study by PwC, 38 per cent of CEOs expressed their ‘extreme concern’ that a lack of key skills could undermine growth.

However, businesses may encounter resistance. Some people fear new ways of working and new technologies. Reskilling measures requiring people to use their own time may disadvantage older workers, parents or caregivers. One study by the Economist Intelligence Unit found worker resistance to new technologies was a technology barrier for over a fifth of executives in Australia, India and Brazil.

There are also a number of legal questions that relate to reskilling.

  • Are existing collective bargaining requirements for employers to invest in training sufficiently broad to cover re-skilling?
  • How do works councils and trades unions affect these calculations – what information should be shared?
  • Is consultation required? Do works councils and unions have any co-determination rights?
  • As employee representatives and authorities focus on re-skilling, will business restructuring programmes become more complicated?

Government and society

Many people lack skills for today’s economy, let alone tomorrow’s. 25 per cent of OECD-region citizens have poor basic literacy or numeracy skills, suggesting that some current education systems require reform before they can be adapted for the future.

If more jobs are rendered obsolete, inequality and poverty rates could rise, straining welfare systems. This shift also calls into question current taxation models. At present, personal taxation is based on income, but if fewer people work this may need to shift to wealth. At the same time, there has been intense debate about the introduction of mechanisms such as universal basic income (a flat-rate wage paid to all) to cover the gap.

In addition, work has meaning beyond pure wealth creation. Even if welfare systems can protect the displaced, the loss of community and purpose among these groups could impact people’s sense of self-worth and their participation in society.

By numbers

96.7%

2014

was the year coding was introduced to the school timetable for every UK child aged 5–16, making it the first G20 country to implement coding training nationwide.

$500

365

the value of the SkillsFuture credit given to all Singaporean citizens aged 25 and over by the government to access a pre-approved list of courses (additional credits are given to mid-career professionals). In 2019, around 540,000 Singaporeans took advantage of the scheme.

200

200

million pounds invested in the Institute of Coding in the UK, launched in 2018 by a consortium of over 60 universities and industry players like Microsoft, to tackle the digital skills shortage.