Op-Ed: A call for responsible leaders to develop talent, connect and shape the future of work
Matthew Busch | Bloomberg | Getty Images · CNBC

If 2017 is anything like 2016, "disruption" is set to become the word of the year. In politics, business and society, recent events have highlighted the shortcomings of predictability and the urgency of expecting the unexpected.

The same applies to the labor market. Warp speed developments in technology – automation, artificial intelligence and the arrival of the sharing economy – are transforming how we work. Beyond technology, traditional working patterns are also being disrupted by changes in society, organizations and workforce management, leading to the rise of a more independent and dispersed workforce.


Flexibility is, indeed, the key to this new age, with around 30 percent of the US and European working population already free agents. The "job for life" no longer exists, while the "multi-career" is the norm.

A failure to recognize and adapt to these challenges could have disastrous consequences for social inequality, unemployment and polarization. While the historical evidence suggests technology augments human productivity and ultimately increases the number of jobs over time, the transition can be rocky.


Talent champions as our template

Helpful pointers for navigating this uncertain future are to be found in the fourth edition of the Global Talent Competitiveness Index (GTCI), which this year has the theme of "Talent and Technology".

Launched for the first time in 2013, the GTCI is an annual benchmarking report that measures the ability of countries to compete for talent. The report ranks 118 countries according to their ability to grow, attract and retain talent.

Switzerland, Singapore and the UK lead the way, with Nordic Countries ranking in the top 10. A success additionally confirmed in the newly launched Global Cities Talent Competitiveness Index (GCTCI), where Copenhagen, Zurich and Helsinki head the ranking and San Francisco is fourth.

The latest index shows that intense "connectedness" between governments, businesses and schools is a common trait of talent winning countries and cities, and collaboration is the keyword for their leaders.

Excellent education derives from such connectedness. "Talent champion" countries have education systems that provide the employable skills the new labor market needs. To shape today's and tomorrow's "future proof" worker, schools must teach specialized hard skills, such as the STEM skills that are in high demand. The European Commission has forecast a shortfall by 2020 of 756,000 information and communication technologies professionals and, according to the World Health Organization, we already lack 7 million healthcare workers.