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Robots could take half of jobs in Denmark

The Local Denmark
The Local Denmark - [email protected]
Robots could take half of jobs in Denmark
Your new neighbourhood bartender? Photo: Francois Lenoir/Scanpix

Nearly half of the jobs currently being done in Denmark could be taken over by robots in the next 20 years, according to a think-tank.

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A study from Brussels think-tank Bruegel found that 49.54 percent of jobs in Denmark at the moment could be computerized and left to robots in the next two decades.
 
European countries most at risk from this computerization were Romania (62 percent) and Italy, Poland, Bulgaria and Greece - all 56 percent.
 
Only Ireland and the Netherlands were less at risk of a robot takeover than Denmark.
 
The exact affect this could have on unemployment rates is unclear because as technology takes over, new jobs are created, meaning those who lose their work to robots will not necessarily become unemployed. 
 
“Technology is likely to dramatically reshape labour markets in the long run and to cause reallocations in the types of skills that the workers of tomorrow will need," Jeremy Bowles of Bruegel wrote about his study last week. "To mitigate the risks of this reallocation it is important for our educational system to adapt."
 
A study published in September last year caused a stir when it listed the jobs in the USA most at risk to robots. 
 
The study calculated how at risk jobs were of computerization by identifying three things which hinder robots potentially taking over the job: creative intelligence, social intelligence and perception and manipulation tasks.
 
Telemarketers, clerks, referees and credit analysts were among the jobs most likely to be taken over by robots, while those least at risk included recreational therapists, social workers and doctors.
 
The Bruegel think-tank took this data from the 2013 study which was based on USA employment figures and applied it to Europe to find out how at risk European countries were.
 
On the whole, jobs in northern European economies were least at risk of computerization, while those in the south and east were most susceptible. 

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