Research Brief | October 26, 2020
RB09-2020
View Research BriefReport | November 17, 2020
Report | November 1, 2019
To provide a framework for MIT's Task Force’s efforts over the next year, this report examines several aspects of the interaction between work and technology.
Research Brief | January 25, 2021
RB19-2021
Research Brief | January 7, 2021
RB18-2021
Research Brief | December 17, 2020
RB17-2020
Research Brief | November 24, 2020
RB16-2020
Research Brief | November 24, 2020
RB15-2020
Research Brief | November 24, 2020
RB14-2020
Research Brief | November 10, 2020
RB13-2020
Research Brief | November 10, 2020
RB12-2020
Research Brief | October 29, 2020
RB11-2020
Research Brief | October 29, 2020
RB10-2020
Working Paper | June 23, 2021
WP14-2021
Working Paper | March 3, 2021
WP13-2021
Working Paper | February 1, 2021
WP12-2021
Working Paper | January 22, 2021
WP11-2021
Working Paper | December 15, 2020
WP10-2020
Working Paper | December 14, 2020
WP09-2020
Working Paper | December 11, 2020
WP08-2020
Working Paper | November 24, 2020
WP07-2020
Working Paper | October 23, 2020
WP06-2020
Working Paper | May 20, 2020
WP05-2020
How to think about automation and potential job loss, where predictions of rising automation & job replacement come from, and offering paths for future research.
Project | September 29, 2020
The Global Research Network is an MIT-led network of researchers, generating comparative international research to help reach data-driven conclusions on topics related to the work of the future and other relevant topics.
Project | August 3, 2020
MIT WotF task force researches trends in several industries in terms of technology adoption, changing skills requirements and overall changes to work and jobs.
Project | August 3, 2020
The MIT Task Force on the Work of the Future uses Detroit MSA to examine the relationships between technology, work, and society through the lens of mobility.
Project | August 3, 2020
The focus of this sub-group is to explore new pathways and institutional arrangements for delivering skills, training, and education based on new technologies.
Project | August 3, 2020
MIT Work of the Future approaches manufacturing to understand how new technology is designed and developed, and how it changes the nature of the work & skills required to succeed.
Publication | January 25, 2022
Publication | January 6, 2022
This new book by the Co-Chairs of the Task force discusses why the United States lags behind other industrialized countries in sharing the benefits of innovation with workers and how we can remedy the problem. The United States has too many low-quality, low-wage jobs. Every country has its share, but those in the United States are especially poorly paid and often without benefits. Meanwhile, overall productivity increases steadily and new technology has transformed large parts of the economy, enhancing the skills and paychecks of higher-paid knowledge workers. What's wrong with this picture? Why have so many workers benefited so little from decades of growth? The Work of the Future shows that technology is neither the problem nor the solution. We can build better jobs if we create institutions that leverage technological innovation and also support workers though long cycles of technological transformation. (to be published 1/25/22)
Publication | December 21, 2021
Publication | July 16, 2020
The authors ask whether the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the conventional wisdom about automation and inequality in the US over the past four decades.