Robots may have to pay income tax in Britain

25 May 2018 / 11:56 H.

LONDON: An official inquiry is to be launched by the British House of Commons into automation and the future of work, it was announced on Thursday, Xinhua news agency reported.
The inquiry by The Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee will look at its likely impact on British businesses and the potential it has for productivity, growth and reindustrialisation.
It follows fears that up to 30% of jobs in Britain are at risk of automation by 2030, said committee chair, Rachel Reeves who sits in the Commons as a Member of Parliament (MP).
One question the inquiry will pose is whether robots which take over jobs currently done by humans should be taxed.
A spokesperson for the British parliament said: "The inquiry will consider the impact of automation on workers, and the potential benefits and choices for consumers.
"The automation inquiry is also set to examine the advice and financial support available for businesses seeking to automate, and for those whose jobs are affected by changes in how we work," he said.
Given the significant impact which automation is likely to have on workers in the future, the committee's inquiry is also likely to look at the policies and actions needed to reskill workers affected by automation, and what role business and the government should take in supporting this.
Reeves said: "Increasing automation offers significant opportunities for businesses and consumers. But it also poses significant challenges, not least to workers who will rightly be concerned by reports that between 15% and 30% of jobs across the economy are at high risk of automation by 2030.
"It's important that workers in the everyday economy where most people work, such as retail or health and social care, get the technological and other support they need to boost productivity and improve the quality of their jobs."
He said automation could provide an opportunity for Britain to reindustrialise, "where we compete internationally on quality and price, not a race to the bottom on wages, through the development of more efficient and productive industries".
The inquiry will also examine if automation could lead to reindustrialisation as processes and products become cheaper, and which sectors are most likely to be affected.
It will look at groups of workers are most at risk and will pose the question of whether the government should take action to support those affected by automation, such as the introduction of "robot tax". — Bernama

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