Welcome to the new look Pocket-lint.co.uk

Japanese look to robots to fill empty jobs 3.5 million positions could be filled by 2025

  • rss
  • pdf
  • share
  • save
  • email
  • print
Gallery

11 April 2008 10:16 GMT / By Katie Scott

Japan could look to robots to fill empty jobs left vacant as its population shrinks.

Experts are predicting that Japan could face a 16% slide in the size of its workforce by 2030.

This, coupled with an increasingly elderly population, may force the government into drastic action and a thinktank has now suggested that robots may well provide the solution.

The Machine Industry Memorial Foundation says robots could fill 3.5 million vacant jobs by 2025, ranging from microsized capsules that detect lesions to help medical staff to high-tech vacuum cleaners.

The foundation said in a report that robots will not actually replace humans (queue sighs of relief from all of us who have watched too many sci-fi films) but could just help out giving people more time to focus on more important jobs.

For example, robots could provide some relief for those caring for the elderly.

The report suggests Japan could save 2.1 trillion yen ($21 billion) of elderly insurance payments in 2025 by using robots that monitor the health of older people, rather than having to use human nursing care.

And robots could also be drafted in as childminders - performing tasks like reading books to children at bedtime.

"Seniors are pushing back their retirement until they are 65 years old, day care centers are being built so that more women can work during the day, and there is a move to increase the quota of foreign laborers. But none of these can beat the shrinking workforce", Takao Kobayashi, who worked on the study, told Reuters.

"Robots are important because they could help in some ways to alleviate such shortage of the labor force."

But Kobayashi did add that the price of robots will have to be brought down significantly before they can be used for everyday, menial tasks.

"There's the expensive price tag, the functions of the robots still need to improve, and then there are the mindsets of people. People need to have the will to use the robots."

Related links



Comments

(Will not be published)

  (Next time sign in to bypass ReCaptcha)

Latest in Gadgets

Latest on Pocket-lint.co.uk

Top 10 Broadband

Compare 50+
broadband packages

Home Broadband »

Pocket-lint.co.uk poll

Q. Is the new Nintendo DSi a waste of time?

Vote YES Vote NO

» LAST TIME
When asked Will your next phone have a touchscreen? 58% said yes and 42% said no