World Bank: Robots aren't yet killing off all our jobs


The "iPal" teaches, jokes and keeps track of its charges through facial recognition technology.

BRUSSELS: The rise of automation has so far had a negligible impact on jobs at a global scale, the World Bank chief economist said, despite common gloomy predictions that humans are set to be replaced by machines.

While advanced economies have shed industrial jobs over the last two decades, the rise of the same sector in East Asia has more than compensated for the loss, according to an annual report published by the Washington-based international financial institution.

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