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Exposure of occupations to technologies of the fourth industrial revolution

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Academic paper
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Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
2110.133170
arXiv Classification
Computer science
Computer science
0
Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/2110.1...17.pdf0
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
0
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...10.133170
Paid/Free
Free0
Academic Discipline
Computer science
Computer science
0
Economics
Economics
0
Submission Date
October 25, 2021
0
Author Names
Benjamin Meindl0
Morgan R. Frank0
Joana Mendonça0
Paper abstract

The fourth industrial revolution (4IR) is likely to have a substantial impact on the economy. Companies need to build up capabilities to implement new technologies, and automation may make some occupations obsolete. However, where, when, and how the change will happen remain to be determined. Robust empirical indicators of technological progress linked to occupations can help to illuminate this change. With this aim, we provide such an indicator based on patent data. Using natural language processing, we calculate patent exposure scores for more than 900 occupations, which represent the technological progress related to them. To provide a lens on the impact of the 4IR, we differentiate between traditional and 4IR patent exposure. Our method differs from previous approaches in that it both accounts for the diversity of task-level patent exposures within an occupation and reflects work activities more accurately. We find that exposure to 4IR patents differs from traditional patent exposure. Manual tasks, and accordingly occupations such as construction and production, are exposed mainly to traditional (non-4IR) patents but have low exposure to 4IR patents. The analysis suggests that 4IR technologies may have a negative impact on job growth; this impact appears 10 to 20 years after patent filing. Further, we compared the 4IR exposure to other automation and AI exposure scores. Whereas many measures refer to theoretical automation potential, our patent-based indicator reflects actual technology diffusion. Our work not only allows analyses of the impact of 4IR technologies as a whole, but also provides exposure scores for more than 300 technology fields, such as AI and smart office technologies. Finally, the work provides a general mapping of patents to tasks and occupations, which enables future researchers to construct individual exposure measures.

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