The Distribution Of Industrial Robots In The US

According to a new report, published by the Brookings Institute, more than half of America’s industrial robot population is concentrated in just ten states in the Midwest and South.

The report defines industrial robots as ‘automatically controlled, reprogrammable machines’, and estimate that the US is home to 233,305 of them — engaged in tasks from welding cars to processing poultry.

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Industrial robots in the US are mainly used in the Midwest and upper South. Credit: Brookings Institute

The report uses data from a study published earlier this year by economists Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo. That study concluded that for every new robot added to the workforce, between 3 and 5.6 jobs are lost in the surrounding area. (The Brookings Institute disputes this analysis, and claims that these local losses don’t necessarily translate into national statistics.)

As part of the institute’s focus on the local impact of automation, this week’s report shows that the use of industrial robots is geographically concentrated.

Michigan has the most (nearly 28,000; about 12% of the country’s total), followed by Ohio (20,400), and Indiana (19,400). Not surprisingly, auto manufacturing hub Detroit is the top robot user in terms of metropolitan areas, with more than 15,000 robots installed — more than three times any other metro areas. By comparison, the entire West of the country accounts for just 13% of the industrial robot population.

“For good and ill, then, this is where the industrial robots are and aren’t,” wrote the Brookings Institute’s Mark Muro in a blog post. “Long to short, their incidence reflects the nature and geography of the nation’s highly automated advanced manufacturing sector.”

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Comparison of robots per thousand workers in red states and blue states. Credit: Brookings

Muro notes that as the spread of industrial robots is geographically concentrated, so too is the fear of their impact. He points out that historically Republican states have more than double the number of robots per workers than Democrat states — 2.5 robots per 1,000 workers compared to 1.1 robot per 1,000 workers.

“This is not to say robots determined the outcome of the 2016 election,” wrote Muro. “However, the red-state robot concentration does suggest that to the extent industrial automation brings difficult labor market transitions and anxiety, it will visit those difficulties most heavily on a particular swath of red-leaning America — specifically, the most robot-exposed locations in the industrial Midwest.”

President Trump campaigned heavily in red states, and repeatedly promised to bring back manufacturing jobs.

Economists have pointed out that restoring the lost jobs in this industry would be a momentous task, as, thanks to increased productivity, creating even half of the 6.4 million manufacturing jobs lost since 1980 would mean increasing the manufacturing output of the US by 26% — equivalent to opening 100 of Tesla’s planned ‘gigafactories’.

Source The Verge

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