Work Digital Economy
Azhar ul Haque Sario
Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Volkswirtschaft
Beschreibung
Work’s Digital Economy unpacks AI and automation’s economic punch. It tracks skill shifts—data literacy, AI ethics, emotional intelligence. It spans the globe—US firms hit 60% AI adoption, Kenya’s at 10%. It dives into industries—robots rule Foxconn, NHS bots triage patients, AI crafts music in Japan. Forecasts mix stats—20% job loss by 2040—with scenarios like automated Sweden. Governance steps up—EU regulates, Singapore retrains. Education pivots—India teaches AI, Germany reskills workers. Inequality bites—older Japanese falter, women shift roles. Productivity jumps—15% for AI firms. Virtual work booms—Microsoft leads. Philosophy asks: why work? GDP grows—China eyes $7 trillion. Ethics wrestle bias—Amazon scraps flawed tools. It’s a full economic sweep. This book stands out where others stumble—it’s not just tech hype or dry stats. It weaves a global tapestry, blending Foxconn’s labor cuts with Kenya’s slow uptake, avoiding the usual US-centric lens. It pairs hard data—like McKinsey’s 25% logistics shift—with human stories, like rural India’s lag. Other books skim governance or education; here, you get the EU’s AI Act and Amazon’s upskilling in depth. It dares to philosophize—work’s meaning in an AI age—while rivals stick to surface trends. It’s raw, broad, and bold, offering a panoramic view no one else nails.
Kundenbewertungen
digital education, governance AI, global AI adoption, economic inequality, workforce skills, productivity gains, automation economy, AI job impact, future of work, industry transformation