Forget robots. The real transformation taking place in nearly every workplace is the invasion of digital tools.
The use of digital tools has increased, often dramatically,
in 517 of 545 occupations since 2002, with a striking uptick in many
lower-skilled occupations, according to a study released Wednesday by
the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. (Study:
//brook.gs/2mn6g9z)
The report underscores the growing need for workers of all
types to gain digital skills and explains why many employers say they
struggle to fill jobs, including many that in the past required few
digital skills. There is anxiety about automation displacing workers and
in many cases, new digital tools allow one worker to do work previously
done by several.
Those 545 occupations reflect 90 percent of all jobs in the
economy. The report found that jobs with greater digital content tend to
pay more and are increasingly concentrated in traditional high-tech
centers like Silicon Valley, Seattle and Austin, Texas.
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