The changing nature of work Paths to the Future

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The changing nature of work Paths to the Future Centre for the Study of Living Standards Armine Yalnizyan Senior Economic Policy Advisor to the Deputy Minister of Employment and Social Development Canada February 19, 2019

Overview The New Abnormal: Slowth The New Clarion Call: Inclusive Growth Non-Digital Futures: Mostly Predictable? Digital Futures: Mostly Unpredictable? Future Frameworks: Highly Contested 2

The New Abnormal: Slowth (Slow Growth) 3

Beyond Canada, global forecasts: slowth 4

Canadian Forecasts: Slowth 5

Slowing growth, coming faster In 1960s: >5% p.a. Today: ~2.5% p.a. In 2 years: 1.5% 6

Why Slowth Is Not Temporary Population Aging Extreme Climate Events Geopolitical Shifts Income and Wealth Inequality Trends 7

Population Aging In The Richest Nations Less Spending Power Globally? 8

Canadian Population Aging Approaching the same dependency ratio as in 1960s,*BUT* for longer, and with half the rate of GDP growth 9

Costs of Extreme Climate Events Globally, insurance payouts for weather-related damage grew 5-fold since 1980s (inflation-adj.) In Cda: $400M in 1983, $1.7B by 2011. $3.2B for just 2 floods in 2015. $3.8B for just insurance costs of Fort McMurray fire in 2017. 60% of damage not insured (CDN rule of thumb) National Roundtable on Environment and Economy 2011 estimate: $5B by 2020, $21-43B p.a. by 2050 StatCan doesn t measure economic impacts. 10

Geopolitical Shifts Rise Of China (& Russia?) Nationalism Autocracy Populism Drag On Trade Multilateralism Immigration Tolerance 11

Globally: More People Forced to Move 68.5 M forcibly displaced in 2017 52% children Rising share displaced from home country (more refugees, more asylum seekers) Falling share able to return home 12

In Canada: More people in biggest cities 13

Inequality becomes hardwired as income polarization turns into spatial polarization 1990: 50% of census tracts were middle income 2015: 49% of census tracts were low income Inequality of opportunity shaped by inequality of outcome Less social mobility 14

Around the world and in Canada: Higher inequality, more polarization within nations 15

Around the world and in Canada: The big are getting bigger. 2018 posed to be biggest year on record for M&A ($3.3TR) 16

Around the world and in Canada: Corporate Concentration Fewer than 10% of publicly traded companies account for over 80% of profits globally (2015) 17

The New Corporate Titans: Fewer Jobs, Harder to Tax & Regulate 18

Why We Are Talking About Inclusive Growth Falling Labour Share of GDP The Game Is Rigged Trump Brexit Challenge to Stability Is Canada different? exceptional? 19

Canadian Exceptionalism: Labour share of GDP hasn t kept falling but household consumption share has soared. 20

Canadian Exceptionalism: Inequality did not worsen, but even robust GDP growth didn t reduce it. 21

Canadian Exceptionalism : Tapped Out? Commodity Supercycle Regionally specific More capital than labour intensive Increased both men s and women s wages Permitted expansion of public services (womencentric) The Girl Effect Rising enrolment in post-secondary education Rising employment rates More diverse, better paid occupational choices 22

Girl Power A Strategy With Diminishing Returns? 23

Mining, Quarrying, Oil and Gas declining as engine of growth 24

What s Next? What We Don t Know: Digital Futures What We Do Know: Non-Digital Trends Responses: Skill/Labour Shortages Skills Development or Immigration? Inclusive Growth Policies The GBA+ Factor The Wage Factor The Services Factor Tax/Spend: Needs versus Constraints 25

Unknown: Digital Futures Estimates of job/task loss via automation by 2030: 5% to 47% Job creation less foreseeable than destruction OnLine Labour Index: Canadian demand is growing most rapidly, but is it new work? Measurement issues (BLS, StatCan, OECD) Job creation in Canada s IT sector fastest in world 26

Friendly Reminder 27

This Time It s Different? Robots For Brawn, Digital For Brains Substitutes for workers (robotics, AI, 3D printing) Moves work from place to place (telepresence, telerobotics) Eliminates work (fintech, blockchain, no middle man) 28

Jobs to Tasks: Work is being unbundled Online freelancing (Upwork, Freelancer) Crowd-based microwork (Amazon Mechanical Turk, Cloudflower) Real World On-demand (Uber, AirBnB, Taskrabbit, Foodora) Virtual Worlds (Second Life, VR) 29

The Big Shift Forward feels like the past for many Shift from the farmer s field to the office in 20 th C; from the office to the web in 21 st C Borderless digital and virtual realities mean global rebalancing of wages More flexibility also means less predictability A virtual Wild West means more exploitation Workers level of control echoing 100 years ago? 30

Future Shock or Future Schlock? 31

Job Birth and Death Rates Both Falling 32

Is Digital Killing or Creating Jobs? Canada punching above its weight OLI (from 4% to 8% of global demand since 2016) Toronto job growth > SF Bay, Washington, Seattle combined, overtook NYC % of labour market? Measurement issues Not just #, but quality of work.contingent/precarious 33

Beyond Digital: Contingency On The Rise? Aggregate: little change since 2008 recession Age specific changes Main job versus all work? Measurement Issues? 34

Beyond Digital The Future Of Work in The Caring Economy Population Aging means more care needs Health care Child care and early learning Smaller working age population, more life-long learning needs Aging worker profiles: 40% of RNs aged 50+, 49% of doctors aged 50+ 15% of the labour market currently provide health, education and child care (2.9M jobs) 25% job growth in health care over last decade, 10% in education Regulated child care market could grow >35% (est 254K workers in 2016) 35

Beyond Digital The Future Of Work in The [Re] Building Economy Public Infrastructure investments over next 10 years >$500B, ~$186B federally alone Private sector residential needs due to immigration, population aging, relocation Unclear demographic profile of skilled trades, many others aging out ~15% of the labour market currently provides construction, repair and maintenance services (just of 3M jobs, 1 M in skilled trades alone) 13% job growth in last decade 36

Addressing Known Skills/Labour Shortages What balance of strategies will we choose? Skills Development Youth Strategies Reduce un- /underemployment of existing citizens/residents Immigration Permanent Economic Immigration Temporary Foreign Workers 37

Imported Solutions: Rise of the Temps 38

Inclusive Growth: Radical Prescription? Private Sector Strategies Skills and Training Collective Bargaining Investment (Innovation or Market Share Expansions?) Reliance on global vs local markets for production/consumption Public Sector Strategies Supports Rules Corporate oversight, offsetting concentration Direction-setting investments? (Green transition, healthier populations, lifelong learning) 39

Inclusive Growth: The Gender Factor 2017 McKinsey Report, The Power Of Parity $150B more GDP by 2026 (6% more growth) Increase labour force participation rates from 61% to 64% Longer working hours Better pay GBA+ could multiply that (improve human capital development, employment rates, reduce pay disparities) 40

Inclusive Growth: The Wage Factor Gender pay gap stalling out around 87 cents Boost the economy from the bottom up? 41

Inclusive Growth: The Skill Factor Skills Upgrading and Life-long learning -- necessary but not sufficient Schooling: based on a seasonal norm set 100 years ago, because of the importance of agriculture. Update? Tertiary education: expensive, time-consuming, does not guarantee decent work Business investment in on-the-job training on the wane (importing the solution is cheaper/easier?) Badging : life-long learning through short-term skills upgrading. Private or public sector driven? 42

Inclusive Growth: Redistribution or Predistribution Money? (Is basic income the answer?) Social wage? affordable and quality basic services (ex. housing, education, health care, child care, transit) reduce the need for money Focus on full employment/decent work? 43

Inclusive Growth: Wage-Led Growth or Debt-Led Growth? 44

Inclusive Growth: Pay Rates or Social Wage? Higher quality of life by improved income OR More income support OR Subsidized rent, education, child care, transit OR More publicly funded health care, education, legal services, etc. 45

Inclusive Growth: Rebalance Bargaining Power Domestically New labour standards for grey workers (neither employee nor independent contractor) Joint employer status to reduce risk-shifting Improve supports for all workers and the unemployed Use laws/courts to exercise sovereignty re worker and human rights, privacy against corporate interests 46

Inclusive Growth: Rebalance Bargaining Power Internationally Reduce tax avoidance, develop an internationally coordinated response (OECD BEPS) Develop a 21 st C anti-trust approach to natural monopolies and corporate concentration (Roosevelt Institute) Update/craft trade agreements to set labour rights as equal to investor rights, regulate supply chains (ETUC, ILO) 47

A Radical New Methodology: Measuring the Meaning of Government Not how big government is, but what it does Future of more constrained revenue growth requires more clarity: what do taxpayers get for their taxes? Analysis of benefits, not just costs (methodologically difficult) Promise (and limitations) of GBA+ analysis outcomes-focused; evidence-based; distributional impact; return on investment/value proposition 48

Is This The Right Trendline For The Future? 49

Role of Government: More Necessary, But More Contested Bigger Government? Less Revenue Growth? Aging population, more public services? Immigration or skills development priority to address predictable labour/skill shortages? Inclusive Growth = Shifts in bargaining power? More regulation? (corporate concentration) More international coordination? 50

Summary Slowth: Slow growth reshapes labour markets as much as technological change, plus destabilizes capitalism, democracy. Past growth strategies are not enough. Inclusive growth: A game-changing frame? Only if policy reforms are game-changing re skills, wages, services, immigration, taxation and corporate regulation. Bigger government? Government s role is growing more obviously important than in the past half century. But bigger government will be a highly contested trend. 51

Thank you for your time. Twitter @ArmineYalnizyan