The employment consequences of robots : firm-level evidence / by Jay Dixon and Bryan Hong. : CS11-0019/454E-PDF

"As a new general-purpose technology, robots have the potential to radically transform industries and employment. In contrast to previous studies at the industry level that predicted dramatic employment declines, this study finds that investments in robotics are associated with increases in total firm employment, but decreases in the total number of managers. It also finds that robot investments are associated with an increase in the span of control for managers remaining within the organization. This study provides evidence that robot adoption is not motivated by the desire to reduce labour costs, but is instead related to improving product and service quality. These findings are consistent with the notion that robots reduce variance in production processes, diminishing the need for managers to monitor workers to ensure production quality. Decreases in managerial headcount may also arise from changes in workforce composition. This study finds that investments in robotics are associated with decreases in employment for middle-skilled workers, but increases in employment for low-skilled and high-skilled workers, potentially changing managerial activities required by the firm. With respect to organizational change, this study shows that robots predict both the centralization and the decentralization of decision-making authority, but decision rights in either case are reassigned away from the managerial level of the hierarchy. This contrasts with previous studies on information technology that have generally found decentralizing effects on decision-making authority within organizations. Overall, the results of this study suggest that the impact of robots on employment and organizational practices is more nuanced than previous studies have shown"--Abstract, page 5.

Lien permanent pour cette publication :
publications.gc.ca/pub?id=9.892122&sl=1

Renseignements sur la publication
Ministère/Organisme Statistics Canada. Analytical Studies Branch, issuing body.
Titre The employment consequences of robots : firm-level evidence / by Jay Dixon and Bryan Hong.
Titre de la série Analytical Studies Branch research paper series, 1205-9153 ; no. 454
Type de publication Série - Voir l'enregistrement principal
Langue [Anglais]
Autres langues publiées [Français]
Format Électronique
Document électronique
Note(s) Issued also in French under title: Répercussions des robots sur l’emploi : données à l’échelle des entreprises.
"Release date: November 2, 2020."
"11F0019M No. 454."
"2020017."
Issued also in HTML format.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 37-41).
Information sur la publication [Ottawa] : Statistics Canada = Statistique Canada, 2020.
©2020
Auteur / Contributeur Dixon, Jay, author.
Description 1 online resource (41 pages) : graphs.
ISBN 9780660361642
Numéro de catalogue
  • CS11-0019/454E-PDF
Numéro de catalogue du ministère 11F0019M
Descripteurs Robots, Industrial -- Canada -- Statistics.
Automation -- Economic aspects -- Canada -- Statistics.
Labor supply -- Effect of automation on -- Canada -- Statistics.
Demander des formats alternatifs
Pour demander une publication dans un format alternatif, remplissez le formulaire électronique des publications du gouvernement du Canada. Utilisez le champ du formulaire «question ou commentaire» pour spécifier la publication demandée.
Date de modification :