The Webinar on the ‘Future of Skills in the Turkish Automotive Sector’ is open to anyone interested. The objective of the webinar is to present and discuss with principal stakeholders the key findings of the ETF study on the future skill needs of the Turkish automotive sector, which was carried out between January and September 2020. This is a follow-up event to the online consultation workshops which were held on 18 and 21 May 2020. The study focuses on changing skills needs and changing tasks of occupations in the sector driven by technological innovations and other drivers of change.
The webinar will be held in English with simultaneous Turkish interpretation. Please find attached the draft agenda of the webinar, which will take place using ZOOM. We kindly invite you to register for the event through this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0kc-GorD0jG9HHGgx_2weswxMkS9IikM2L”
ETF is happy for this successfully held webinar 7on last Tuesday. Overall, 83 people registered to the webinar and a total of 70 people followed it fully. This is a good number!
Turkey institutions supported by IPA 2020 Programming are looking into the Skills for the Future of Work in many other sectors, beside the automotive sector. The ETF work and methodology will inspire and be used for the work in the other Turkey economy sectors with an angle on skills for inclusion.
New research looks closer at the impact of automation, artificial intelligence, and digital technologies on Turkey’s talent transformation and future workforce. Advances in automation, artificial intelligence (AI), and digital technologies are changing the way we work, the activities we perform, and the skills we need to succeed. Catching this
Over the past decade, McKinsey has looked deeply at the future of work to understand the dynamics. And the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) has studied the effects of automation on workforces and skills since 2015, describing options that could help stakeholders benefit from potential changes in business models.
MGI considers the adoption of digital technologies the most important factor in future economic growth. Research shows that adoption of digital technologies will account for about 60 percent of the potential productivity increase by 2030. This holds true for Turkey: automation, AI, and digital technologies have the potential to boost the country’s economy, so it is critically important to understand the opportunities and challenges regarding the future of work and to prepare the Turkish workforce for the upcoming transformation.
A new report, Future of work: Turkey’s talent transformation in the digital era, dives deeper on the issues. It examines the impact of productivity growth driven by automation, AI, and digital technologies on different sectors and occupations. It also addresses the opportunities that will emerge to transform Turkey’s talent marketplace and the challenges that the country must overcome, supported by a fact base that will help stakeholders prioritize efforts to adapt the workplace to this new world. We hope that this report will shed light on the benefits that automation and increased productivity will bring to Turkey by 2030.
On a global scale, current technologies have the potential to help automate 50 percent of jobs. In Turkey, with the current technologies, six out of ten occupations could be automated by 30 percent. The analyses in this report are based on a scenario in which average levels of automation in Turkey are 20 to 25 percent by 2030.
The report foresees that in the next decade, automation, AI, and digital technologies, along with complementary investments, have the potential to create 3.1 million net new jobs, considering the economic impact and societal changes the technology will bring (exhibit). By 2030, with the impact of automation and digitization, 7.6 million jobs could disappear and 8.9 million new jobs could emerge, a net gain of 1.3 million jobs. In addition, 1.8 million new jobs could be created, many of them in technology-related sectors. To enable this change, 21.1 million people in the Turkish workforce will need to improve their skills by leveraging technology while remaining employed in their current jobs. Automation and digitization are expected to affect 7.6 million employees through significant reskilling and job displacements. In addition, 7.7 million new employees who will join the workforce will need to be equipped with the latest skills required.
https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/future-of-work/the-future-of…
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