Robots Create more jobs than they Kill

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Robots Create More Jobs Than They Kill — Julien Reszka

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Machines destroying jobs is easy to debunk. Japan is among the most roboticised major economies and has one of the lowest unemployment rates in the G10.

2.5% Japan's unemployment rate alongside world-leading robot density Statistics Bureau of Japan

In theory, automation destroys jobs; in practice it creates more than it destroys, because every reduction in startup costs lets more businesses form, and more businesses means more jobs to fill. The clearest proof is Japan: one of the world's most heavily roboticised major economies, it consistently posts one of the lowest unemployment rates among G10 nations, not despite its robots but alongside them. The real limit on job creation has never been the number of tasks humans can do. It has been the upfront capital required to start a business. Automation lowers that floor:

More founders can enter.

More companies get built.

The net result is more employment, not less.

Myth: Robots destroy more jobs than they createInternational Federation of Robotics

If you want to start something, focus on reducing your startup cost rather than waiting for a safe market. Automation is the cheapest it has ever been. Use it to lower the floor on what viable looks like.

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Discussion

Are you trying to start something but stalling because the economics of getting started still feel out of reach?

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Henrik P. Copenhagen, Denmark 2026-03-28

Yes. I keep almost-starting a small manufacturing business and the upfront cost is the only blocker. The automation-equals-cheap-floor argument is the unlock I needed.

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Yuna C. Singapore 2026-03-29

Same: the economics that killed the idea two years ago are different now. Time to revisit.

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Mateo L. 2026-03-29

Yes. Was waiting for a 'safer market' that never came. The honest move is to lower my startup cost and just begin.

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Elena V. Rome, Italy 2026-03-30

Japan's low unemployment is largely explained by demographics. The working-age population has been contracting for thirty years. Japan would have low unemployment with or without robots because there aren't enough workers to fill available roles. Using Japan as evidence that robots create jobs confounds two unrelated trends.

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