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COVID-19 has accelerated technological revolution in Caribbean, Latin America – Report
Caribbean and Latin America is in the midst of a “Fourth Industrial Revolution”
A new report by the World Bank has found that the Caribbean and Latin America is in the midst of a “Fourth Industrial Revolution” of technological innovation which requires enhancing the productivity of the services sector, investing in human capital and rethinking labour regulations and social protection policies.
The financial institution said that these policy priorities have become all the more urgent now that the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic is fueling the biggest contraction in economic activity since the great depression.
It said digitization has become more important to support economic activity at a time of social distancing and is accelerating this technological transformation, potentially putting jobs at risk across the Caribbean and Latin America.
According to the report, titled “Going Viral: COVID-19 and the Accelerated Transformation of Jobs in Latin America and the Caribbean“, employment transformations that were already apparent in the last few decades are bound to deepen, and the question in this context is how to recover from the crisis and build back better.
“We need to rethink the future and not just try to get back to where we were before the pandemic,” said World Bank vice-president for the Caribbean and Latin America Carlos Felipe Jaramillo.
“Governments need to find ways to support the creation of new jobs, train workers to be ready for these new jobs and support their citizens through this disruptive transformation,” he added.
The report noted that premature de-industrialization and rapid technological innovation will require policies to support a smooth transformation of jobs that is socially acceptable. The region was already struggling with the end of the so-called “Golden Decade” (2003-2013) of rapid development and strong improvements in social indicators. Economic growth and poverty reduction had stalled. The pandemic has only made things worse.
The World Bank said while fears of mass “technological unemployment” are largely unfounded, many jobs are at risk due to lower external demand, a protracted period of quarantines and lockdowns, solvency problems for firms, and financial crises in some cases. In addition, the social unrest seen in 2019 is a warning. It is urgent to restore economic growth and create more and better jobs.
“However, this ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ of technological innovation means that further industrialization or re-industrialization will be limited in many developing countries. Low-paid, uneducated workers and those in high-contact activities typical of the informal sector are at highest risk of being replaced by machines. In addition, informal workers are harder to reach with essential social protection programmes. The COVID-19 crisis could accelerate these changes, bringing the future much closer than anticipated.”
With limited scope for employment growth in manufacturing, modernising the services sector is a priority,” the World Bank said, adding this calls for an emphasis on removing the distortions that prevent competition and innovation from occurring at a rapid pace.
Preparing workers for the changes is also fundamental.
“Education offers the best insurance against the risks of automation. Workers will have to adapt to demand for cognitive or analytical skills, as well as interpersonal skills,” said the report’s lead author Guillermo Beylis, a research economist in the World Bank’s Office of the Chief Economist for the Caribbean and Latin America.
The report noted that adult learning and retraining will be key as new automation technologies are adopted in the Caribbean and Latin America. The focus should be on policy reforms to increase productivity in the services sector, which already employs 60 percent of the workforce and will play an increasingly important role in the future.
The bank also urged a rethinking of labor regulations and social protection policies is needed.
“This involves flexible regulation of the emerging forms of work in a way that encourages employment and supports formalization, thereby expanding the coverage of social protection to larger segments of the population,” it said. -(CMC)
