According to a latest research by Forrester, 63 million jobs in Asia Pacific are expected to be lost to automation by 2040.
More than 247 million jobs projected to be in peril across industries that are more susceptible to automation, such as construction and agriculture.
The research firm also predicts that working populations in the five largest economies in the region — India, China, South Korea, Australia, and Japan — are more at risk due to physical robot automation than Europe and North America.
“To prepare for the changes brought on by automation, the five largest economies in APAC will have to radically rethink their workforce strategies,” said Michael O’Grady, principal forecast analyst at Forrester.
He added: “While each economy faces its own challenges, common focus areas such as hiring more female workers can help offset working population declines. In addition, investing in STEM education, technology workforce training, and protecting the rights of freelance workers will become of utmost importance.”
Entitled “Future Of Jobs Forecast, 2020 To 2040 (India, China, South Korea, Australia, And Japan)”, the research study also predicts that the green economy – in the coming years – will help offset some job losses as more countries commit to carbon neutrality.
Furthermore, the five APAC countries included in the research will create 28.5 million new jobs in renewable energy, green buildings, smart cities and smart infrastructure, and professional services by 2040.
But even with the creation of new jobs in areas such as the green economy and information and communications technology (ICT) industries, 13.7 million jobs in the region will be lost to automation across wholesale, retail, transport, accommodation, and leisure sectors.
Each country faces different challenges. Key highlights include:
- Similar to the US, Australia’s high GDP per worker incentivises firms to automate jobs to improve productivity and reduce labour costs. Australia will see 11% of jobs lost to automation by 2040. Jobs across consulting, scientific, and technical services, which are harder to automate, will see the fastest growth, especially in the ICT industry.
- By 2040, China will see its working population decline by 11%, and 7% of jobs will be lost to automation. Job growth in the ICT industry will help offset automation job losses, with 3.8 million additional new jobs created by 2040.
- India, which has a relatively young workforce, will add 160 million new workers over the next 20 years, reaching a working population of 1.1 billion by 2040. Although 69% of India’s jobs are under threat from automation, the country’s main priority will be job creation to accommodate new workers entering the workforce.
- Due to an ageing workforce and the country’s low birth rate, between 2020 and 2040, Japan’s working population will contract by 19%. By 2050, it is forecasted to decline by almost one-third.
- South Korea. Driven by its aging working population and its dependency on the construction and agriculture industries, which are more susceptible to automation, South Korea’s workforce will contract by 23% over the next 20 years.