Description
The Future of Jobs Employment, Skills and Workforce Strategy for the Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Future of Jobs
Employment, Skills and
Workforce Strategy for the
Fourth Industrial Revolution
January 2016
Executive Summary
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 1
Disruptive changes to business models will have a profound
impact on the employment landscape over the coming
years. Many of the major drivers of transformation currently
affecting global industries are expected to have a significant
impact on jobs, ranging from significant job creation to job
displacement, and from heightened labour productivity to
widening skills gaps. In many industries and countries, the
most in-demand occupations or specialties did not exist
10 or even five years ago, and the pace of change is set
to accelerate. By one popular estimate, 65% of children
entering primary school today will ultimately end up working
in completely new job types that don’t yet exist. In such
a rapidly evolving employment landscape, the ability
to anticipate and prepare for future skills requirements,
job content and the aggregate effect on employment
is increasingly critical for businesses, governments and
individuals in order to fully seize the opportunities presented
by these trends—and to mitigate undesirable outcomes.
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report
seeks to understand the current and future impact of key
disruptions on employment levels, skill sets and recruitment
patterns in different industries and countries. It does so
by asking the Chief Human Resources Officers (CHROs)
of today’s largest employers to imagine how jobs in their
industry will change up to the year 2020.
DRIVERS OF CHANGE
We are today at the beginning of a Fourth Industrial
Revolution. Developments in previously disjointed fields
such as artificial intelligence and machine learning,
robotics, nanotechnology, 3D printing and genetics and
biotechnology are all building on and amplifying one
another. Smart systems—homes, factories, farms, grids
or entire cities—will help tackle problems ranging from
supply chain management to climate change. Concurrent
to this technological revolution are a set of broader socio-
economic, geopolitical and demographic developments,
with nearly equivalent impact to the technological factors.
We also find that on average respondents expect that
the impact for nearly all drivers will occur within the next 5
years, highlighting the urgency for adaptive action today.
EMPLOYMENT TRENDS
The global workforce is expected to experience significant
churn between job families and functions. Across the
countries covered by the Report, current trends could lead
to a net employment impact of more than 5.1 million jobs
lost to disruptive labour market changes over the period
2015–2020, with a total loss of 7.1 million jobs—two thirds
of which are concentrated in routine white collar office
functions, such as Office and Administrative roles—and a
total gain of 2 million jobs, in Computer and Mathematical
and Architecture and Engineering related fields.
Manufacturing and Production roles are also expected to
see a further bottoming out but are also anticipated to have
relatively good potential for upskilling, redeployment and
productivity enhancement through technology rather than
pure substitution.
New and Emerging Roles
Our research also explicitly asked respondents about
new and emerging job categories and functions that they
expect to become critically important to their industry by the
year 2020. Two job types stand out due to the frequency
and consistency with which they were mentioned across
practically all industries and geographies. The first are data
analysts, which companies expect will help them make
sense and derive insights from the torrent of data generated
by technological disruptions. The second are specialized
sales representatives, as practically every industry will need
to become skilled in commercializing and explaining their
offerings to business or government clients and consumers,
either due to the innovative technical nature of the products
themselves or due to new client targets with which the
company is not yet familiar, or both. A particular need is
also seen in industries as varied as Energy and Media,
Entertainment and Information for a new type of senior
manager who will successfully steer companies through the
upcoming change and disruption.
Executive Summary:
The Future of Jobs and Skills
Methodology
The Future of Jobs Report’s research framework has been
shaped and developed in collaboration with the Global
Agenda Council on the Future of Jobs and the Global
Agenda Council on Gender Parity, including leading experts
from academia, international organizations, professional
service firms and the heads of human resources of major
organizations. Our analysis groups job functions into
specific occupations and broader job families, based on a
streamlined version of the O*NET labour market information
system used by researchers worldwide.
The dataset that forms the basis of the Report is
the result of an extensive survey of CHROs and other
senior talent and strategy executives from a total of 371
leading global employers, representing more than 13
million employees across 9 broad industry sectors in 15
major developed and emerging economies and regional
economic areas.
2 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of drivers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Drivers of change, industries overall
Share of respondents rating driver as top trend, %
DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC
TECHNOLOGICAL
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Changing nature of work, flexible work
Middle class in emerging markets
Climate change, natural resources
Geopolitical volatility
Consumer ethics, privacy issues
Longevity, ageing societies
Young demographics in emerging markets
Women’s economic power, aspirations
Rapid urbanization
44%
23%
23%
21%
16%
14%
13%
12%
8%
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Mobile internet, cloud technology
Processing power, Big Data
New energy supplies and technologies
Internet of Things
Sharing economy, crowdsourcing
Robotics, autonomous transport
Artificial intelligence
Adv. manufacturing, 3D printing
Adv. materials, biotechnology
34%
26%
22%
14%
12%
9%
7%
6%
6%
Timeframe to impact industries, business models
Impact felt already 2015–2017
» Rising geopolitical volatility
» Mobile internet and cloud technology
» Advances in computing power and
Big Data
» Crowdsourcing, the sharing
economy and peer-to-peer platforms
» Rise of the middle class in emerging
markets
» Young demographics in emerging
markets
» Rapid urbanization
» Changing work environments and
flexible working arrangements
» Climate change, natural resource
constraints and the transition to a
greener economy
» New energy supplies and
technologies
» The Internet of Things
» Advanced manufacturing and
3D printing
» Longevity and ageing societies
» New consumer concerns about
ethical and privacy issues
» Women’s rising aspirations and
economic power
» Advanced robotics and
autonomous transport
» Artificial intelligence and
machine learning
» Advanced materials,
biotechnology and genomics
2018–2020
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 3
Changes in Ease of Recruitment
Given the overall disruption industries are experiencing, it
is not surprising that, with current trends, competition for
talent in in-demand job families such as Computer and
Mathematical and Architecture and Engineering and other
strategic and specialist roles will be fierce, and finding
efficient ways of securing a solid talent pipeline a priority
for virtually every industry. Most of these roles across
industries, countries and job families are already perceived
as hard to recruit for currently and—with few exceptions—
the situation is expected to worsen significantly over the
2015-2020 period.
SKILLS STABILITY
In this new environment, business model change often
translates to skill set disruption almost simultaneously
and with only a minimal time lag. Our respondents report
that a tangible impact of many of these disruptions on the
adequacy of employees’ existing skill sets can already be
felt in a wide range of jobs and industries today.
Given the rapid pace of change, business model
disruptions are resulting in a near-simultaneous impact
on skill sets for both current and emerging jobs across
industries. If skills demand is evolving rapidly at an
aggregate industry level, the degree of changing skills
requirements within individual job families and occupations
is even more pronounced. Even jobs that will shrink in
number are simultaneously undergoing change in the skill
sets required to do them. Across nearly all industries, the
impact of technological and other changes is shortening the
shelf-life of employees’ existing skill sets.
For example, technological disruptions such as
robotics and machine learning—rather than completely
replacing existing occupations and job categories—are
likely to substitute specific tasks previously carried out as
part of these jobs, freeing workers up to focus on new
tasks and leading to rapidly changing core skill sets in
these occupations. Even those jobs that are less directly
affected by technological change and have a largely stable
employment outlook—say, marketing or supply chain
professionals targeting a new demographic in an emerging
market—may require very different skill sets just a few years
from now as the ecosystems within which they operate
change.
On average, by 2020, more than a third of the desired
core skill sets of most occupations will be comprised of
skills that are not yet considered crucial to the job today,
according to our respondents. Overall, social skills—
such as persuasion, emotional intelligence and teaching
others—will be in higher demand across industries than
narrow technical skills, such as programming or equipment
operation and control. In essence, technical skills will need
to be supplemented with strong social and collaboration
skills.
Several industries may find themselves in a scenario of
positive employment demand for hard-to-recruit specialist
Net employment outlook by job family, 2015–2020
Employees (thousands, all focus countries)
+492
+416
+405
+339
+303
+66
–4,759
–1,609
–497
–151
–109
–40
Business and Financial
Operations
Management
Computer and Mathematical
Architecture and Engineering
Sales and Related
Education and Training
Office and Administrative
Manufacturing and Production
Construction and Extraction
Arts, Design, Entertainment,
Sports and Media
Legal
Installation and Maintenance
4 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
Expected change in ease of recruitment, 2015–2020
Perception rating on a –2 (“very hard”) to +2 (“very easy”) scale
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
–0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
United
States
United
Kingdom
Turkey South
Africa
Mexico Japan Italy India Germany GCC France China Brazil Australia ASEAN
INDUSTRIES
JOB FAMILIES
COUNTRY/REGION
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
Professional
Services
Mobility Media,
Entertainment
and Information
Information and
Communication
Technology
Healthcare Financial
Services
& Investors
Energy Consumer Basic and
Infrastructure
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
–0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
Sales and
Related
Of?ce
and
Administrative
Life,
Physical,
and
Social
Sciences
Manufacturing
and
Production
Manage-
ment
Installation
and
Maintenance
Construction
and
Extraction
Computer
and
Mathematical
Business
and
Financial
Operations
Arts, Design,
Entertainment,
Sports
and Media
Architecture
and
Engineering
–0.55
–0.29
0.02
–0.70
–0.67
–0.20
–0.34
–0.43
–0.20
–1.00
–0.58
–0.44
n/a
–0.50
–0.41
–0.71
–0.06
–0.67
–0.65
0.04
–0.85
–0.21
–0.13
–0.50
–0.62
–0.63
–0.14
–0.34
–0.5
–0.54
–0.53
–0.42
–0.49
–0.44
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
–0.39
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 5
occupations with simultaneous skills instability across many
existing roles. For example, the Mobility industries expect
employment growth accompanied by a situation where
nearly 40% of the skills required by key jobs in the industry
are not yet part of the core skill set of these functions today.
At the same time, workers in lower skilled roles,
particularly in the Office and Administrative and
Manufacturing and Production job families, may find
themselves caught up in a vicious cycle where low skills
stability means they could face redundancy without
significant re- and upskilling even while disruptive change
may erode employers’ incentives and the business case for
investing in such reskilling.
Drivers of change, time to impact on employee skills
Share of respondents, %
DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC
TECHNOLOGICAL
Changing nature of work, flexible work
Middle class in emerging markets
Climate change, natural resources
Geopolitical volatility
Consumer ethics, privacy issues
Longevity, ageing societies
Young demographics in emerging markets
Women’s economic power, aspirations
Rapid urbanization
Mobile internet, cloud technology
Processing power, Big Data
New energy supplies and technologies
Internet of Things
Sharing economy, crowdsourcing
Robotics, autonomous transport
Artificial intelligence
Adv. manufacturing, 3D printing
Adv. materials, biotechnology
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
n Impact felt already
n 2015–2017
n 2018–2020
n 2021–2025
n Impact felt already
n 2015–2017
n 2018–2020
n 2021–2025
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of drivers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Industry group Unstable Stable
Industries Overall 35% 65%
Media, Entertainment and Information 27% 73%
Consumer 30% 71%
Healthcare 29% 71%
Energy 30% 70%
Professional Services 33% 67%
Information and Communication Technology 35% 65%
Mobility 39% 61%
Basic and Infrastructure 42% 58%
Financial Services & Investors 43% 57%
Skills Stability, 2015–2020, industries overall
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
6 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
FUTURE WORKFORCE STRATEGY
The impact of technological, demographic and socio-
economic disruptions on business models will be felt
in transformations to the employment landscape and
skills requirements, resulting in substantial challenges for
recruiting, training and managing talent. Not anticipating and
addressing such issues in a timely manner over the coming
years may come at an enormous economic and social cost
for businesses, individuals and economies and societies as
a whole.
The Report finds that business leaders are aware
of these looming challenges but have been slow to act
decisively. Just over two thirds of our respondents believe
that future workforce planning and change management
features as a reasonably high or very high priority on
the agenda of their company’s or organization’s senior
leadership.
However, many of the respondents are also acutely
aware of the limitations to their current planning for
disruptive change and its implications for the talent
landscape. Currently, only 53% of CHROs surveyed are
reasonably or highly confident regarding the adequacy of
their organization’s future workforce strategy to prepare
for these shifts. The main perceived barriers to a more
decisive approach include a lack of understanding of the
disruptive changes ahead, resource constraints and short-
term profitability pressures and lack of alignment between
workforce strategies and firms’ innovation strategies.
Across all industries, about two thirds of our
respondents report intentions to invest in the reskilling of
current employees as part of their change management
and future workforce planning efforts, making it by far the
highest-ranked such strategy overall. However, companies
that report both that they are confident in the adequacy of
their workforce strategy and that these issues are perceived
as a priority by their top management are nearly 50% more
likely to plan to invest in reskilling than companies who do
not. This group of companies is also more than twice as
likely to be targeting female talent and minority talent and
over 50% more likely to be supporting employees’ mobility
and job rotation within the firm. They are significantly less
likely to plan to hire more short-term workers or to use
expatriate talent.
A number of promising approaches appear
underutilized across almost all industries. For example, a
focus on making better use of the accumulated experience
of older employees and building an ageless workforce
barely register among proposed workforce strategies.
There also seems to be varying openness to collaboration,
whether within or across industries, with the latter
seemingly much more acceptable. Finally, a key approach,
partnerships with public institutions and the education
sector, is only reported by 20% of respondents.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ACTION
Recent discussions about the employment impact of
disruptive change have often been polarized between those
who foresee limitless opportunities in newly emerging job
categories and prospects that improve workers’ productivity
and liberate them from routine work, and those that foresee
massive labour substitution and displacement of jobs.
Both are possible. It is our actions today that will determine
whether we head towards massive displacement of workers
or the emergence of new opportunities.
During previous industrial revolutions, it often took
decades to build the training systems and labour market
institutions needed to develop major new skill sets on
a large scale. Given the upcoming pace and scale of
disruption brought about by the Fourth Industrial Revolution,
however, this is simply not be an option. Without targeted
action today to manage the near-term transition and build
a workforce with futureproof skills, governments will have
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Expected change in employment, 2015-2020, %
S
k
i
l
l
s
s
t
a
b
i
l
i
t
y
2
0
1
5
-
2
0
2
0
,
%
–1.0 –0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Healthcare
Professional Services
Mobility
Basic and Infrastructure
Consumer
Information and Communication Technology
Media, Entertainment and Information
AVERAGE
Financial Services & Investors
Energy
Employment outlook and skills stability, by industry
Negative outlook,
skills stable
Positive outlook,
skills stable
Negative outlook,
skills disrupted
Positive outlook,
skills disrupted
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 7
to cope with ever-growing unemployment and inequality,
and businesses with a shrinking consumer base. Moreover,
these efforts are necessary not just to mitigate the risks of
the profound shifts underway but also to capitalize on the
opportunities presented by the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
The talent to manage, shape and lead the changes
underway will be in short supply unless we take action
today to develop it.
For a talent revolution to take place, governments and
businesses will need to profoundly change their approach
to education, skills and employment, and their approach to
working with each other. Businesses will need to put talent
development and future workforce strategy front and centre
to their growth. Firms can no longer be passive consumers
of ready-made human capital. They require a new mindset
to meet their talent needs and to optimize social outcomes.
Governments will need to re-consider fundamentally the
education models of today. As the issue becomes more
urgent, governments will need to show bolder leadership in
putting through the curricula and labour market regulation
changes that are already decades overdue in some
economies.
While it is clear from our data that momentous change
is underway across the board, these forecasts vary in nature
in different industries and regions. Efforts aimed at closing
skills gaps will increasingly need to be grounded in a solid
understanding of a country’s or industry’s skills base today
and of changing future skills requirements due to disruptive
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of barriers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Signi?cance of barriers to change, industries overall
Share of respondents reporting barrier, %
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
Insufficient understanding of disruptive changes
Resource constraints
Pressure from shareholders, short-term profitability
Workforce strategy not aligned to innovation strategy
Insufficient priority by top management
Don’t know
Insufficient priority by line management
No barriers
51%
50%
42%
37%
21%
18%
18%
8%
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of strategies have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Future workforce strategies, industries overall
Share of respondents pursuing strategy, %
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
Invest in reskilling current employees
Support mobility and job rotation
Collaborate, educational institutions
Target female talent
Attract foreign talent
Offer apprenticeships
Collaborate, other companies across industries
Collaborate, other companies in industry
Target minorities’ talent
Hire more short-term workers
65%
39%
25%
25%
22%
22%
14%
12%
12%
11%
8 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
change. For example, efforts to place unemployed youth in
apprenticeships in certain job categories through targeted
skills training may be self-defeating if skills requirements
in that job category are likely to be drastically different in
just a few years’ time. Indeed, in some cases such efforts
may be more successful if they base their models on future
expectations.
It is therefore critical that broader and longer term
changes to basic and lifelong education systems are
complemented with specific, urgent and focused re-
skilling efforts in each industry. This entails several major
changes in how business views and manages talent, both
immediately and in the longer term. In particular, the Future
of Jobs Report finds that there are four areas with short
term implications and three that are critical for long term
resilience.
Immediate Focus
• Reinventing the HR Function: As business leaders
begin to consider proactive adaptation to the new talent
landscape, they need to manage skills disruption as an
urgent concern. What this requires is an HR function
that is rapidly becoming more strategic and has a seat
at the table—one that employs new kinds of analytical
tools to spot talent trends and skills gaps, and
provides insights that can help organizations align their
business, innovation and talent management strategies
to maximize available opportunities to capitalize on
transformational trends.
• Making Use of Data Analytics: Businesses and
governments will need to build a new approach to
workforce planning and talent management, where
better forecasting data and planning metrics will need
to be central. To support such efforts, the Forum’s
Future of Jobs project provides in-depth analysis on
industries, countries, occupations and skills.
• Talent diversity—no more excuses: As study after
study demonstrates the business benefits of workforce
diversity and companies expect finding talent for many
key specialist roles to become much more difficult
by 2020, it is time for a fundamental change in how
talent diversity issues perceived and well-known
barriers tackled. In this area, too, technology and data
analytics may become a useful tool for advancing
workforce parity, whether by facilitating objective
assessment, identifying unconscious biases in job ads
and recruitment processes or even by using wearable
technologies to understand workplace behaviours and
encourage systemic change.
• Leveraging flexible working arrangements
and online talent platforms: As physical and
organizational boundaries are becoming increasingly
blurred, organizations are going to have to become
significantly more agile in the way they think about
managing people’s work and about the workforce
as a whole. Businesses will increasingly connect and
collaborate remotely with freelancers and independent
professionals through digital talent platforms. Modern
forms of association such as digital freelancers’
unions and updated labour market regulations will
increasingly begin to emerge to complement these new
organizational models.
Longer Term Focus
• Rethinking education systems: Most existing
education systems at all levels provide highly siloed
training and continue a number of 20th century
practices that are hindering progress on today’s talent
and labour market issues. Two such legacy issues
burdening formal education systems worldwide are
the dichotomy between Humanities and Sciences and
applied and pure training, on the one hand, and the
prestige premium attached to tertiary-certified forms of
education—rather than the actual content of learning—
on the other hand. Businesses should work closely
with governments, education providers and others to
imagine what a true 21st century curriculum might look
like.
• Incentivizing lifelong learning: The dwindling future
population share of today’s youth cohort in many
ageing economies implies that simply reforming current
education systems to better equip today’s students
to meet future skills requirements—as worthwhile and
daunting as that task is—is not going to be enough to
remain competitive. Ageing countries won’t just need
lifelong learning—they will need wholesale reskilling
of existing workforces throughout their lifecycle.
Governments and businesses have many opportunities
to collaborate more to ensure that individuals have
the time, motivation and means to seek retraining
opportunities.
• Cross-industry and public-private collaboration:
Given the complexity of the change management
needed, businesses will need to realize that
collaboration on talent issues, rather than competition,
is no longer a nice-to-have but rather a necessary
strategy. Multi-sector partnerships and collaboration,
when they leverage the expertise of each partner in a
complementary manner, are indispensable components
of implementing scalable solutions to jobs and skills
challenges. There is thus a need for bolder leadership
and strategic action within companies and within and
across industries, including partnerships with public
institutions and the education sector.
These efforts will need to be complemented by policy
reform on the part of governments. As a core component of
the World Economic Forum’s Global Challenge Initiative on
Employment, Skills and Human Capital, the Future of Jobs
project aims to bring specificity to the upcoming disruptions
to the employment and skills landscape in industries and
regions—and to stimulate deeper thinking and targeted
action from business and governments to manage this
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 9
change. The 2020 focus of the Report was chosen so
as to be far enough into the future for many of today’s
expected trends and disruptions to have begun taking hold,
yet close enough to consider adaptive action today, rather
than merely speculate on future risks and opportunities.
The industry analysis presented in the Report will form
the basis of dialogue with industry leaders to address
industry-specific talent challenges, while the country and
regional analysis presented in this Report will be integrated
into national and regional public-private collaborations to
promote employment and skills.
World Economic Forum
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doc_632924755.pdf
The Future of Jobs Employment, Skills and Workforce Strategy for the Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Future of Jobs
Employment, Skills and
Workforce Strategy for the
Fourth Industrial Revolution
January 2016
Executive Summary
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 1
Disruptive changes to business models will have a profound
impact on the employment landscape over the coming
years. Many of the major drivers of transformation currently
affecting global industries are expected to have a significant
impact on jobs, ranging from significant job creation to job
displacement, and from heightened labour productivity to
widening skills gaps. In many industries and countries, the
most in-demand occupations or specialties did not exist
10 or even five years ago, and the pace of change is set
to accelerate. By one popular estimate, 65% of children
entering primary school today will ultimately end up working
in completely new job types that don’t yet exist. In such
a rapidly evolving employment landscape, the ability
to anticipate and prepare for future skills requirements,
job content and the aggregate effect on employment
is increasingly critical for businesses, governments and
individuals in order to fully seize the opportunities presented
by these trends—and to mitigate undesirable outcomes.
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report
seeks to understand the current and future impact of key
disruptions on employment levels, skill sets and recruitment
patterns in different industries and countries. It does so
by asking the Chief Human Resources Officers (CHROs)
of today’s largest employers to imagine how jobs in their
industry will change up to the year 2020.
DRIVERS OF CHANGE
We are today at the beginning of a Fourth Industrial
Revolution. Developments in previously disjointed fields
such as artificial intelligence and machine learning,
robotics, nanotechnology, 3D printing and genetics and
biotechnology are all building on and amplifying one
another. Smart systems—homes, factories, farms, grids
or entire cities—will help tackle problems ranging from
supply chain management to climate change. Concurrent
to this technological revolution are a set of broader socio-
economic, geopolitical and demographic developments,
with nearly equivalent impact to the technological factors.
We also find that on average respondents expect that
the impact for nearly all drivers will occur within the next 5
years, highlighting the urgency for adaptive action today.
EMPLOYMENT TRENDS
The global workforce is expected to experience significant
churn between job families and functions. Across the
countries covered by the Report, current trends could lead
to a net employment impact of more than 5.1 million jobs
lost to disruptive labour market changes over the period
2015–2020, with a total loss of 7.1 million jobs—two thirds
of which are concentrated in routine white collar office
functions, such as Office and Administrative roles—and a
total gain of 2 million jobs, in Computer and Mathematical
and Architecture and Engineering related fields.
Manufacturing and Production roles are also expected to
see a further bottoming out but are also anticipated to have
relatively good potential for upskilling, redeployment and
productivity enhancement through technology rather than
pure substitution.
New and Emerging Roles
Our research also explicitly asked respondents about
new and emerging job categories and functions that they
expect to become critically important to their industry by the
year 2020. Two job types stand out due to the frequency
and consistency with which they were mentioned across
practically all industries and geographies. The first are data
analysts, which companies expect will help them make
sense and derive insights from the torrent of data generated
by technological disruptions. The second are specialized
sales representatives, as practically every industry will need
to become skilled in commercializing and explaining their
offerings to business or government clients and consumers,
either due to the innovative technical nature of the products
themselves or due to new client targets with which the
company is not yet familiar, or both. A particular need is
also seen in industries as varied as Energy and Media,
Entertainment and Information for a new type of senior
manager who will successfully steer companies through the
upcoming change and disruption.
Executive Summary:
The Future of Jobs and Skills
Methodology
The Future of Jobs Report’s research framework has been
shaped and developed in collaboration with the Global
Agenda Council on the Future of Jobs and the Global
Agenda Council on Gender Parity, including leading experts
from academia, international organizations, professional
service firms and the heads of human resources of major
organizations. Our analysis groups job functions into
specific occupations and broader job families, based on a
streamlined version of the O*NET labour market information
system used by researchers worldwide.
The dataset that forms the basis of the Report is
the result of an extensive survey of CHROs and other
senior talent and strategy executives from a total of 371
leading global employers, representing more than 13
million employees across 9 broad industry sectors in 15
major developed and emerging economies and regional
economic areas.
2 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of drivers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Drivers of change, industries overall
Share of respondents rating driver as top trend, %
DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC
TECHNOLOGICAL
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Changing nature of work, flexible work
Middle class in emerging markets
Climate change, natural resources
Geopolitical volatility
Consumer ethics, privacy issues
Longevity, ageing societies
Young demographics in emerging markets
Women’s economic power, aspirations
Rapid urbanization
44%
23%
23%
21%
16%
14%
13%
12%
8%
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Mobile internet, cloud technology
Processing power, Big Data
New energy supplies and technologies
Internet of Things
Sharing economy, crowdsourcing
Robotics, autonomous transport
Artificial intelligence
Adv. manufacturing, 3D printing
Adv. materials, biotechnology
34%
26%
22%
14%
12%
9%
7%
6%
6%
Timeframe to impact industries, business models
Impact felt already 2015–2017
» Rising geopolitical volatility
» Mobile internet and cloud technology
» Advances in computing power and
Big Data
» Crowdsourcing, the sharing
economy and peer-to-peer platforms
» Rise of the middle class in emerging
markets
» Young demographics in emerging
markets
» Rapid urbanization
» Changing work environments and
flexible working arrangements
» Climate change, natural resource
constraints and the transition to a
greener economy
» New energy supplies and
technologies
» The Internet of Things
» Advanced manufacturing and
3D printing
» Longevity and ageing societies
» New consumer concerns about
ethical and privacy issues
» Women’s rising aspirations and
economic power
» Advanced robotics and
autonomous transport
» Artificial intelligence and
machine learning
» Advanced materials,
biotechnology and genomics
2018–2020
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 3
Changes in Ease of Recruitment
Given the overall disruption industries are experiencing, it
is not surprising that, with current trends, competition for
talent in in-demand job families such as Computer and
Mathematical and Architecture and Engineering and other
strategic and specialist roles will be fierce, and finding
efficient ways of securing a solid talent pipeline a priority
for virtually every industry. Most of these roles across
industries, countries and job families are already perceived
as hard to recruit for currently and—with few exceptions—
the situation is expected to worsen significantly over the
2015-2020 period.
SKILLS STABILITY
In this new environment, business model change often
translates to skill set disruption almost simultaneously
and with only a minimal time lag. Our respondents report
that a tangible impact of many of these disruptions on the
adequacy of employees’ existing skill sets can already be
felt in a wide range of jobs and industries today.
Given the rapid pace of change, business model
disruptions are resulting in a near-simultaneous impact
on skill sets for both current and emerging jobs across
industries. If skills demand is evolving rapidly at an
aggregate industry level, the degree of changing skills
requirements within individual job families and occupations
is even more pronounced. Even jobs that will shrink in
number are simultaneously undergoing change in the skill
sets required to do them. Across nearly all industries, the
impact of technological and other changes is shortening the
shelf-life of employees’ existing skill sets.
For example, technological disruptions such as
robotics and machine learning—rather than completely
replacing existing occupations and job categories—are
likely to substitute specific tasks previously carried out as
part of these jobs, freeing workers up to focus on new
tasks and leading to rapidly changing core skill sets in
these occupations. Even those jobs that are less directly
affected by technological change and have a largely stable
employment outlook—say, marketing or supply chain
professionals targeting a new demographic in an emerging
market—may require very different skill sets just a few years
from now as the ecosystems within which they operate
change.
On average, by 2020, more than a third of the desired
core skill sets of most occupations will be comprised of
skills that are not yet considered crucial to the job today,
according to our respondents. Overall, social skills—
such as persuasion, emotional intelligence and teaching
others—will be in higher demand across industries than
narrow technical skills, such as programming or equipment
operation and control. In essence, technical skills will need
to be supplemented with strong social and collaboration
skills.
Several industries may find themselves in a scenario of
positive employment demand for hard-to-recruit specialist
Net employment outlook by job family, 2015–2020
Employees (thousands, all focus countries)
+492
+416
+405
+339
+303
+66
–4,759
–1,609
–497
–151
–109
–40
Business and Financial
Operations
Management
Computer and Mathematical
Architecture and Engineering
Sales and Related
Education and Training
Office and Administrative
Manufacturing and Production
Construction and Extraction
Arts, Design, Entertainment,
Sports and Media
Legal
Installation and Maintenance
4 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
Expected change in ease of recruitment, 2015–2020
Perception rating on a –2 (“very hard”) to +2 (“very easy”) scale
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
–0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
United
States
United
Kingdom
Turkey South
Africa
Mexico Japan Italy India Germany GCC France China Brazil Australia ASEAN
INDUSTRIES
JOB FAMILIES
COUNTRY/REGION
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
Professional
Services
Mobility Media,
Entertainment
and Information
Information and
Communication
Technology
Healthcare Financial
Services
& Investors
Energy Consumer Basic and
Infrastructure
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
–0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
Sales and
Related
Of?ce
and
Administrative
Life,
Physical,
and
Social
Sciences
Manufacturing
and
Production
Manage-
ment
Installation
and
Maintenance
Construction
and
Extraction
Computer
and
Mathematical
Business
and
Financial
Operations
Arts, Design,
Entertainment,
Sports
and Media
Architecture
and
Engineering
–0.55
–0.29
0.02
–0.70
–0.67
–0.20
–0.34
–0.43
–0.20
–1.00
–0.58
–0.44
n/a
–0.50
–0.41
–0.71
–0.06
–0.67
–0.65
0.04
–0.85
–0.21
–0.13
–0.50
–0.62
–0.63
–0.14
–0.34
–0.5
–0.54
–0.53
–0.42
–0.49
–0.44
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
A
v
e
r
a
g
e
e
a
s
e
o
f
r
e
c
r
u
i
t
m
e
n
t
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
–0.39
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 5
occupations with simultaneous skills instability across many
existing roles. For example, the Mobility industries expect
employment growth accompanied by a situation where
nearly 40% of the skills required by key jobs in the industry
are not yet part of the core skill set of these functions today.
At the same time, workers in lower skilled roles,
particularly in the Office and Administrative and
Manufacturing and Production job families, may find
themselves caught up in a vicious cycle where low skills
stability means they could face redundancy without
significant re- and upskilling even while disruptive change
may erode employers’ incentives and the business case for
investing in such reskilling.
Drivers of change, time to impact on employee skills
Share of respondents, %
DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC
TECHNOLOGICAL
Changing nature of work, flexible work
Middle class in emerging markets
Climate change, natural resources
Geopolitical volatility
Consumer ethics, privacy issues
Longevity, ageing societies
Young demographics in emerging markets
Women’s economic power, aspirations
Rapid urbanization
Mobile internet, cloud technology
Processing power, Big Data
New energy supplies and technologies
Internet of Things
Sharing economy, crowdsourcing
Robotics, autonomous transport
Artificial intelligence
Adv. manufacturing, 3D printing
Adv. materials, biotechnology
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
0 10 20 30 40 50
n Impact felt already
n 2015–2017
n 2018–2020
n 2021–2025
n Impact felt already
n 2015–2017
n 2018–2020
n 2021–2025
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of drivers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Industry group Unstable Stable
Industries Overall 35% 65%
Media, Entertainment and Information 27% 73%
Consumer 30% 71%
Healthcare 29% 71%
Energy 30% 70%
Professional Services 33% 67%
Information and Communication Technology 35% 65%
Mobility 39% 61%
Basic and Infrastructure 42% 58%
Financial Services & Investors 43% 57%
Skills Stability, 2015–2020, industries overall
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
6 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
FUTURE WORKFORCE STRATEGY
The impact of technological, demographic and socio-
economic disruptions on business models will be felt
in transformations to the employment landscape and
skills requirements, resulting in substantial challenges for
recruiting, training and managing talent. Not anticipating and
addressing such issues in a timely manner over the coming
years may come at an enormous economic and social cost
for businesses, individuals and economies and societies as
a whole.
The Report finds that business leaders are aware
of these looming challenges but have been slow to act
decisively. Just over two thirds of our respondents believe
that future workforce planning and change management
features as a reasonably high or very high priority on
the agenda of their company’s or organization’s senior
leadership.
However, many of the respondents are also acutely
aware of the limitations to their current planning for
disruptive change and its implications for the talent
landscape. Currently, only 53% of CHROs surveyed are
reasonably or highly confident regarding the adequacy of
their organization’s future workforce strategy to prepare
for these shifts. The main perceived barriers to a more
decisive approach include a lack of understanding of the
disruptive changes ahead, resource constraints and short-
term profitability pressures and lack of alignment between
workforce strategies and firms’ innovation strategies.
Across all industries, about two thirds of our
respondents report intentions to invest in the reskilling of
current employees as part of their change management
and future workforce planning efforts, making it by far the
highest-ranked such strategy overall. However, companies
that report both that they are confident in the adequacy of
their workforce strategy and that these issues are perceived
as a priority by their top management are nearly 50% more
likely to plan to invest in reskilling than companies who do
not. This group of companies is also more than twice as
likely to be targeting female talent and minority talent and
over 50% more likely to be supporting employees’ mobility
and job rotation within the firm. They are significantly less
likely to plan to hire more short-term workers or to use
expatriate talent.
A number of promising approaches appear
underutilized across almost all industries. For example, a
focus on making better use of the accumulated experience
of older employees and building an ageless workforce
barely register among proposed workforce strategies.
There also seems to be varying openness to collaboration,
whether within or across industries, with the latter
seemingly much more acceptable. Finally, a key approach,
partnerships with public institutions and the education
sector, is only reported by 20% of respondents.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ACTION
Recent discussions about the employment impact of
disruptive change have often been polarized between those
who foresee limitless opportunities in newly emerging job
categories and prospects that improve workers’ productivity
and liberate them from routine work, and those that foresee
massive labour substitution and displacement of jobs.
Both are possible. It is our actions today that will determine
whether we head towards massive displacement of workers
or the emergence of new opportunities.
During previous industrial revolutions, it often took
decades to build the training systems and labour market
institutions needed to develop major new skill sets on
a large scale. Given the upcoming pace and scale of
disruption brought about by the Fourth Industrial Revolution,
however, this is simply not be an option. Without targeted
action today to manage the near-term transition and build
a workforce with futureproof skills, governments will have
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Expected change in employment, 2015-2020, %
S
k
i
l
l
s
s
t
a
b
i
l
i
t
y
2
0
1
5
-
2
0
2
0
,
%
–1.0 –0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Healthcare
Professional Services
Mobility
Basic and Infrastructure
Consumer
Information and Communication Technology
Media, Entertainment and Information
AVERAGE
Financial Services & Investors
Energy
Employment outlook and skills stability, by industry
Negative outlook,
skills stable
Positive outlook,
skills stable
Negative outlook,
skills disrupted
Positive outlook,
skills disrupted
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 7
to cope with ever-growing unemployment and inequality,
and businesses with a shrinking consumer base. Moreover,
these efforts are necessary not just to mitigate the risks of
the profound shifts underway but also to capitalize on the
opportunities presented by the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
The talent to manage, shape and lead the changes
underway will be in short supply unless we take action
today to develop it.
For a talent revolution to take place, governments and
businesses will need to profoundly change their approach
to education, skills and employment, and their approach to
working with each other. Businesses will need to put talent
development and future workforce strategy front and centre
to their growth. Firms can no longer be passive consumers
of ready-made human capital. They require a new mindset
to meet their talent needs and to optimize social outcomes.
Governments will need to re-consider fundamentally the
education models of today. As the issue becomes more
urgent, governments will need to show bolder leadership in
putting through the curricula and labour market regulation
changes that are already decades overdue in some
economies.
While it is clear from our data that momentous change
is underway across the board, these forecasts vary in nature
in different industries and regions. Efforts aimed at closing
skills gaps will increasingly need to be grounded in a solid
understanding of a country’s or industry’s skills base today
and of changing future skills requirements due to disruptive
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of barriers have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Signi?cance of barriers to change, industries overall
Share of respondents reporting barrier, %
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
Insufficient understanding of disruptive changes
Resource constraints
Pressure from shareholders, short-term profitability
Workforce strategy not aligned to innovation strategy
Insufficient priority by top management
Don’t know
Insufficient priority by line management
No barriers
51%
50%
42%
37%
21%
18%
18%
8%
Source: Future of Jobs Survey, World Economic Forum.
Note: Names of strategies have been abbreviated to ensure legibility.
Future workforce strategies, industries overall
Share of respondents pursuing strategy, %
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8
Invest in reskilling current employees
Support mobility and job rotation
Collaborate, educational institutions
Target female talent
Attract foreign talent
Offer apprenticeships
Collaborate, other companies across industries
Collaborate, other companies in industry
Target minorities’ talent
Hire more short-term workers
65%
39%
25%
25%
22%
22%
14%
12%
12%
11%
8 | Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills
change. For example, efforts to place unemployed youth in
apprenticeships in certain job categories through targeted
skills training may be self-defeating if skills requirements
in that job category are likely to be drastically different in
just a few years’ time. Indeed, in some cases such efforts
may be more successful if they base their models on future
expectations.
It is therefore critical that broader and longer term
changes to basic and lifelong education systems are
complemented with specific, urgent and focused re-
skilling efforts in each industry. This entails several major
changes in how business views and manages talent, both
immediately and in the longer term. In particular, the Future
of Jobs Report finds that there are four areas with short
term implications and three that are critical for long term
resilience.
Immediate Focus
• Reinventing the HR Function: As business leaders
begin to consider proactive adaptation to the new talent
landscape, they need to manage skills disruption as an
urgent concern. What this requires is an HR function
that is rapidly becoming more strategic and has a seat
at the table—one that employs new kinds of analytical
tools to spot talent trends and skills gaps, and
provides insights that can help organizations align their
business, innovation and talent management strategies
to maximize available opportunities to capitalize on
transformational trends.
• Making Use of Data Analytics: Businesses and
governments will need to build a new approach to
workforce planning and talent management, where
better forecasting data and planning metrics will need
to be central. To support such efforts, the Forum’s
Future of Jobs project provides in-depth analysis on
industries, countries, occupations and skills.
• Talent diversity—no more excuses: As study after
study demonstrates the business benefits of workforce
diversity and companies expect finding talent for many
key specialist roles to become much more difficult
by 2020, it is time for a fundamental change in how
talent diversity issues perceived and well-known
barriers tackled. In this area, too, technology and data
analytics may become a useful tool for advancing
workforce parity, whether by facilitating objective
assessment, identifying unconscious biases in job ads
and recruitment processes or even by using wearable
technologies to understand workplace behaviours and
encourage systemic change.
• Leveraging flexible working arrangements
and online talent platforms: As physical and
organizational boundaries are becoming increasingly
blurred, organizations are going to have to become
significantly more agile in the way they think about
managing people’s work and about the workforce
as a whole. Businesses will increasingly connect and
collaborate remotely with freelancers and independent
professionals through digital talent platforms. Modern
forms of association such as digital freelancers’
unions and updated labour market regulations will
increasingly begin to emerge to complement these new
organizational models.
Longer Term Focus
• Rethinking education systems: Most existing
education systems at all levels provide highly siloed
training and continue a number of 20th century
practices that are hindering progress on today’s talent
and labour market issues. Two such legacy issues
burdening formal education systems worldwide are
the dichotomy between Humanities and Sciences and
applied and pure training, on the one hand, and the
prestige premium attached to tertiary-certified forms of
education—rather than the actual content of learning—
on the other hand. Businesses should work closely
with governments, education providers and others to
imagine what a true 21st century curriculum might look
like.
• Incentivizing lifelong learning: The dwindling future
population share of today’s youth cohort in many
ageing economies implies that simply reforming current
education systems to better equip today’s students
to meet future skills requirements—as worthwhile and
daunting as that task is—is not going to be enough to
remain competitive. Ageing countries won’t just need
lifelong learning—they will need wholesale reskilling
of existing workforces throughout their lifecycle.
Governments and businesses have many opportunities
to collaborate more to ensure that individuals have
the time, motivation and means to seek retraining
opportunities.
• Cross-industry and public-private collaboration:
Given the complexity of the change management
needed, businesses will need to realize that
collaboration on talent issues, rather than competition,
is no longer a nice-to-have but rather a necessary
strategy. Multi-sector partnerships and collaboration,
when they leverage the expertise of each partner in a
complementary manner, are indispensable components
of implementing scalable solutions to jobs and skills
challenges. There is thus a need for bolder leadership
and strategic action within companies and within and
across industries, including partnerships with public
institutions and the education sector.
These efforts will need to be complemented by policy
reform on the part of governments. As a core component of
the World Economic Forum’s Global Challenge Initiative on
Employment, Skills and Human Capital, the Future of Jobs
project aims to bring specificity to the upcoming disruptions
to the employment and skills landscape in industries and
regions—and to stimulate deeper thinking and targeted
action from business and governments to manage this
Executive Summary: The Future of Jobs and Skills | 9
change. The 2020 focus of the Report was chosen so
as to be far enough into the future for many of today’s
expected trends and disruptions to have begun taking hold,
yet close enough to consider adaptive action today, rather
than merely speculate on future risks and opportunities.
The industry analysis presented in the Report will form
the basis of dialogue with industry leaders to address
industry-specific talent challenges, while the country and
regional analysis presented in this Report will be integrated
into national and regional public-private collaborations to
promote employment and skills.
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