The impact of new technologies on the labour market and the social economy
Study : IP/G/STOA/FWC/2013 - 001/LOT 8 /C 1 : February 2018Autor(es):
Dachs, Bernhard
Parlamento Europeo. Dirección General de Servicios de Estudios Parlamentarios
Editor: Brussels European Union 2018Descripción: 64 pTipo de contenido: texto (visual)Tipo de medio: electrónico
Tipo de soporte: recurso en líneaISSN: 978-92-846-2586-4Tema(s): Sociedad digital | Economía digital | Economics and Monetary Issues | Employment | Industry | Social PolicyRecursos en línea: Acceso al documento Resumen: This STOA study investigates the potential employment effects of new information and communication technologies, by examining the relationship between innovation, new technologies, employment and inequality. It reviews the existing literature and experiences of previous technological revolutions, and argues that the race between job creation through new products, and job destruction from process innovation, has been won in the past by the job-creating effects of innovation. It concludes that there is an uneven distribution in the costs of digitalisation, because of the skills-biased nature of technological change - so the challenge of the future lies in coping with rising inequality from technological change. The study also proposes a set of policy options for dealing with the employment effects of digitalisation
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Informes |
CDO
El Centro de Documentación del Observatorio Nacional de las Telecomunicaciones y de la Sociedad de la Información (CDO) os da la bienvenida al catálogo bibliográfico sobre recursos digitales en las materias de Tecnologías de la Información y telecomunicaciones, Servicios públicos digitales, Administración Electrónica y Economía digital.
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Link to resource | Acceso libre online | 1000020174891 |
This STOA study investigates the potential employment effects of new information and communication technologies, by examining the relationship between innovation, new technologies, employment and inequality. It reviews the existing literature and experiences of previous technological revolutions, and argues that the race between job creation through new products, and job destruction from process innovation, has been won in the past by the job-creating effects of innovation. It concludes that there is an uneven distribution in the costs of digitalisation, because of the skills-biased nature of technological change - so the challenge of the future lies in coping with rising inequality from technological change. The study also proposes a set of policy options for dealing with the employment effects of digitalisation
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