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Home Research Topics Internet & Technology Emerging Technology Automation
Pew Research CenterMarch 8, 2016
Public Predictions for the Future of Workforce Automation

Workers in the government, education and nonprofit sectors, as well as those whose jobs involve manual or physical labor, have high expectations for the staying power of their current job

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Workers in the government, education and nonprofit sectors, as well as those whose jobs involve manual or physical labor, have high expectations for the staying power of their current job

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Public Predictions for the Future of Workforce Automation
Two-thirds of Americans expect that robots and computers will do much of the work currently done by humans within 50 years but most workers expect that their own jobs will exist in their current forms in five decades
Government, education and nonprofit workers are slightly more skeptical about the likelihood of widespread workforce automation
Workers in the government, education and nonprofit sectors, as well as those whose jobs involve manual or physical labor, have high expectations for the staying power of their current job
Workers who perform physical or manual labor more concerned about a number of imminent job threats
Workforce Automation Methodology

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