Wacker, Konstantin M.

Robots, shoring patterns, and employment: What are the linkages? - Wien : Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw), 2025. - 34 S., 6 Tables and 5 Figures, 30cm. - wiiw Working Papers 267 . - wiiw Working Papers 267 .

In this paper, we analyse how robotisation is associated with industry output and its production inputs. We therefore link data on employment, robotisation and input-output relations for 15 manufacturing industries across 35 countries. Analysing the decade prior to 2018, we show that robotising industries experience increases in output and approximately equiproportional increases in value added, employment, domestic intermediate inputs and foreign intermediate inputs. Owing to this equiproportionality, robotising industries do not see a significant change in their domestic input ratios (value added plus domestic intermediates relative to total inputs).

Our empirical results document that robotising industries are thriving in terms of output generation, that those thriving industries are internationally well integrated, and that their output expansion is associated with employment generation. Industries that use an increasing share of domestic production inputs generally experience less favourable output and employment developments, although this association is imprecisely estimated.



Robots
reshoring
employment
labour
production location
global value chains
GVCs


Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Chile
China
Colombia
Czechia
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Japan
Latvia
Lithuania
Malta
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Turkey
United Kingdom
US