An article published in the National American Journal of Nationals says that the Corona virus may motivate many companies to think more seriously about "automation", but these concerns are exaggerated.

James Pithokokis adds in his article that the pandemic could spur many companies to trade online, so that more workers in their warehouses and in their implementation centers in the future are robots.

We have been led to believe that there is a new wave of "automation" and that this wave is made possible by smarter AI and more sophisticated robots, Pethokokis says.

But this belief may change after the Corona pandemic, and is attributed to the author Matt Simon as saying that the current economic disaster caused by the outbreak of the Corna virus has undermined the myth of labor robots and the control of artificial intelligence.

Human intelligence
adds that some people - like former presidential candidate Andrew Yang - argue that the problem will get worse, and that the world will need to use basic aid or a global basic income model (UBI) - a sum of money to provide citizens regardless of their income, to reduce From poverty and increasing equality between them - or to support workers who are removed from their jobs.

But the writer believes that the global economy cannot do without human workers, because machines are still very far from catching human intelligence and ingenuity.

The author refers to a study conducted by researcher James Bison from Boston University regarding the threat that modern "automation" poses to human employment, which states that "automation" tends to eliminate some, but not all, of the tasks that make up a particular job.

The study indicates that many professions were eliminated for a variety of reasons, but few were excluded because of "automation".