Older workers today face significant risks of displacement at the hands of emerging technologies, and are often overlooked as viable sources of renewed productivity. It is therefore incumbent on employers to redeploy the unique abilities of older workers as part and parcel of any digital transformation strategy.
Indeed, employers that do not incorporate these workers into workplace strategies run the risk of exacerbating older worker non- and under-employment, deepening social instability, and losing out on a valuable opportunity to enhance productivity.
The Twin Threats of Aging and Automation examines and quantifies the risks of rapid societal aging, and of older workers’ susceptibility to automation in fifteen major markets. Key findings include:
- Countries with higher rates of aging also face a higher risk of older worker job automation
- Older worker jobs in China and Vietnam are at the highest risk of being automated, with 76 percent of tasks done by older workers in China and 69 percent in Vietnam at risk of being replaced by intelligent technologies
- Canada and Australia have the lowest rates of aging and the lowest average risk scores (at 47 percent and 42 percent of older-worker tasks respectively), making older worker jobs in these countries the least susceptible to automation
- In Germany, older worker jobs are on average 57 percent automatable
- In the United States, older workers are doing jobs that are on average 52 percent automatable
- Key factors that help explain a higher risk of older worker job automation include: education levels, industrial structures, government expenditure, and the strength of legal rights in financial systems.
Figure 1: Risk of Automation to Older Workers
Source: Marsh & McLennan Insights Calculations, UN Data, Frey and Osborne (2017), National
Figure 2: Risks of Aging and Automation
Source: Marsh & McLennan Insights Calculations, UN Data, Frey and Osborne (2017), National databases
The twin threats of aging and automation present both risks and opportunities for societies globally. To find out more, please download our full report.