Tag Archives: tech

Canada Will Require to Fill 216,000 Technology-related Positions by 2021

Recently, I came across one of the leading news about Canada country. The Canadian business landscape has rapidly digitized a lack of professional and skilled laborers that is deterring the growth potential.

There is one new report has been published on April 12, 2017, by the Information and Communications Technology Council (ICTC), providing information that Canada will need to fill approximately 216,000 technology-based positions by 2021 that is up from 2015 predictions of 182,000 by 2019.

The Labour Market Outlook of ICTC 2017-2021 stated that this demand stumbles from a progressively growing Canadian digital economy that experienced a 2.38% growth between 2011 and 2016 as compared to the 1.17% growth for the rest of the economy.

ICTC writes, “The overall digital labor force now amounts to around 1,389,000 professionals, and is reflective of the health of this economy and the expanding range of occupations in this space”.

As per the report, it came to know that 53% of tech professionals in the digital economy work in non-tech industries, that specifies an increased occurrence of technology across all sectors of the Canadian economy. It is also predicted that the proportion of tech workers by 2021 in non-tech industries will increase to 84%.

Do You Know Where Talent is Required?

For technology professionals, much of increasing demand is attributed to transformative and rapid advancements of technology, the reports added, especially in five emerging sectors such as virtual and augmented reality (VR and AR), artificial intelligence (AI), the blockchain, 5G mobile technology and 3D printing.

Let’s take an example, VR and AR are presently worth of approximately $30 billion and $120 billion respectively and it will need to fill positions as computer and information systems managers, technical sales specialists, software engineers, even industrial instrument technicians, and mechanics.

In the manufacturing sector, 3D printing has already proved to be troublesome and it will require more technological talent to help realize its economic opportunities, including electrical and electronics engineers, computer programmers, graphic arts technicians, and interactive media developers.

ICTC says that the blockchain technologies will transform the financial services industry, and professionals, who have expertise and skills, can move forward to the development of such infrastructure that will be in high demand.

Data administrators, database analysts, designers, software engineers and other user support technicians will be in high demand and they must be desirable for AI advancement also. Moreover, the report also predicted that along with major potential for retail, manufacturing and health sectors, and AI will keep creating economic advancements in banking services, transportation and more.

And the last major transformative technology, the global 5G value chain will make $3.5 trillion in output, outweighing the current value of today’s entire mobile value chain, supporting 22 million jobs in 2035.

A range of applications can be seen easily as it disrupts everything from the public administration industry and manufacturing, to financial services and the culture and recreation sectors.

Canada-wide Problem

The requirement for tech professionals is a cross-Canada issue with ICTC highlighting Ontario, British Columbia, and Quebec as there are three provinces with the high demand.

It is expected that Ontario will constantly move ahead from a manufacturing-focused province to one fueled by technologies such as 3D printing, Ai, and 5G mobile. ICTC forecasts that approximately 88,000 tech jobs will be shaped by 2021 and a total number of employment in the tech sector will reach about 669,500.

In tech employment, British Columbia will experience a huge increase by 2021 with total employment expecting to be more than 161000. Quebec notes atmosphere and gaming as these are the two biggest industries that hire tech talent that stand to advantage from the emergence of the five key emerging technologies.

As per the reports, 44,400 tech workers will get the benefit, bringing total employment up to more than 336,000.

Resolving the Skills Gap Problem

To eliminate the gap, it is important for the country to better train workers and places a special focus on preparing youth with the right skills to enter the tech industry.

The report says, “The hallmark of success in this environment is equipping Canadians with the relevant technology skills to innovate, adopt technologies, and produce higher-value goods and services”.

In addition to this, the report also stated, “This will empower a more dynamic economy based on our ability as a nation to intensify investments in infrastructure and [research and development], diversify our industries, and expand trade.”

The competition is majorly from Canada’s southern neighbor, the US, and other industries that are looking forward to digitally transform, and lead-time to staff perilous positions that also remain a challenge for various businesses.

Self-driving Cars – How It Changes the Economy?

Still self-driving cars are not on the road, but when they will make their entry in the market, they will surely give a huge impact on the economy and society as a whole. It is expected that Uber’s self-driving will hit the road this month that is the biggest surprise for all the people unless you are a driver. However, they are not the only ones that are affected by the penalties of robot-induced unemployment could ultimately through the rest of the economy.

uber-self-driving-diving

If Uber will launch its self-driving cars, what will happen to Uber’s 1 million drivers? And what about 3.5 million truck drivers in the US? There are enormous delivery, bus, taxi and other drivers across the world, so what about them? All these jobs are not going fade in just one single day. It could take 20 years, but if we will not plan for it, it can cause mass hardship for some while delivering mass convenience to others.

Undeniably, self-driving cars are the future of the self-driving economy, and it is also expected that it will be safer and relaxing for travelers. Moreover, it will also decrease the traffic and carbon emissions. For knowledge workers, they could also free up productive time, which used to be spent stuck behind the wheel. It will be a lot cheaper compared to paying a person to pilot the vehicle.

Bloomberg writes, “Trips will be free for the time being, rather than the standard local rate of $1.30 per mile. In the long run, [Uber CEO Travis] Kalanick says, prices will fall so low that the per-mile cost of travel, even for long trips in rural areas, will be cheaper in a driverless Uber than in a private car.”

Uber have also declared that it has acquired a self-driving truck company.

Dropped Off

When it comes to talking about the problem, it establishes the core form of low-skilled labor along with the cashiers and fast-food prep. For all of them, robots are coming very soon; however, some people are arguing that technology will produce new jobs for these people.

Many people are arguing that technology will not create new jobs for these people. Possibly, they will not be attainable by those losing their low-skilled ones but it may create new job opportunities.

When cars first invented, they threatened the low-skilled laborers, which used to bring people and objects across horses. The idea is that the better and wonderful technology will create better jobs for horses as rested out by this fanciful Humans Need Not Apply video.

Do you know what this shift to autonomy? What will it do and impact the economy of the replaced low-skilled laborers up to the owners and designers of the self-driving fleets? As it is a Marxist nightmare. However, the software has already been causing the similar effect; however, the explosion of autonomous robots will enable this revolution to grow beyond bits and invade the realm of atoms.

Kalanick and some of the other advocates of self-driving cars are discussing that they will make the road safer for self-driving cars. McKinsey&Company report also estimated that self-dependent cars could reduce traffic fatalities by up to 90% by mid-century.

Recently, there have been lots of high-profile accidents, comprising a fatal crash in May involving a Tesla Model S, which was in autopilot mode.

Kalanick said, “Google has been working on self-driving cars for eight years. And there’s a reason. A million people die every year in cars, from human error. People making mistakes when they’re driving. And there are tens of millions of people getting injured”.

He also added, “Then think of the trillions of hours that we spend behind the wheel driving. There will be a huge, huge positive impact on society when driverless cars become a thing.”