According to an analysis by the Economic and Entrepreneurship Research Institute (GVI) of the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a significant number of Hungarian employees – 730,000 – work in areas where many of the tasks could be performed by machines. It is estimated that the pace of automation expansion in Central and Eastern Europe will be above the European average in the near future, so labor market effects are sure to be felt in this region, according to the GVI research into the automation of occupations registered in Hungary.
Routine, easy-to-write, and consequently programmable tasks that could be […]
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