A solution to job-stealing robots is staring us right in the face

mechanic
mechanic

(Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Workers have worried about what machines will do to their jobs for 200 years.

  • Retraining and education are offered as solutions to help workers learn to work with technology instead of being displaced by it.

  • In the US, though, it isn't guaranteed — even though better worker-focused programs could help boost the economy.

WASHINGTON, DC — Ricardo Sorto knew exactly what he wanted to do early in high school. His passion for cars made the decision to become a mechanic a no-brainer.

A volatile US job market had something entirely different in mind.

When he finished high school in 2011, Sorto was already doing unpaid work fixing school buses after class. But once he scored a job at a local branch of the auto-repair chain Just Tires, he found himself in a hypercompetitive environment with too many applicants and too few jobs.

It led to low wages and a stressful workplace. So, rather than scraping by at $8 an hour, Sorto took a paid internship at the tech-support center of the Arlington, Virginia, public-school system. He delivered computers to public schools and installed software.

"Being there I was told I was tech-savvy and knew my way around a computer," he recalled to Business Insider.

Now 25, he's studying information technology at Northern Virginia Community College and hunting for jobs in the DC area — where he has plenty of prospects.

Pivoting quickly and training for a new profession is exactly what workers have been told to do for decades as they've feared being replaced by machines or lower-wage overseas rivals or displaced in a lousy economy.

And it can work. Students with the right qualifications are able to work with technology instead of being displaced by it, says Oded Karev, the vice president of advanced process automation at Nice, a firm that specializes in helping companies as varied as retailers and energy producers use machines to do the mundane tasks that once took up much of employees' time.

"Most processes require judgment calls, require human empathy," Karev told Business Insider. "We call it the 'attended automation' model — man working with machine, instead of machine replacing man."

Enabling this on a large scale, though, requires a government willing to invest in education infrastructure and a safety net for workers as they make the change as well as businesses willing to shoulder some of the cost. In the US, despite a fair amount of lip service paid to the subject, that's not guaranteed. Where it is available, it's in the form of piecemeal arrangements.

That's actually bad for the economy.