This paper addresses the current and emerging uses and impacts of robots, the mid-term future of robotics and the role of policy. Progress in robotics will help to make life easier, richer and healthier. Wider robot use will help raise labour productivity. As science and engineering progress, robots will become more central to crisis response, from helping combat infectious diseases to maintaining critical infrastructure. Governments can accelerate and orient the development and uptake of socially valuable robots, for instance by: supporting cross-disciplinary R&D, facilitating research commercialisation, helping small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) understand the opportunities for investment in robots, supporting platforms that highlight robot solutions in healthcare and other sectors, embedding robotics engineering in high school curricula, tailoring training for workers with vocational-level mechanical skills, supporting data development useful to robotics, ensuring flexible regulation conducive to innovation, strengthening digital connectivity, and raising awareness of the importance of robotics.
Making life richer, easier and healthier
Robots, their future and the roles for public policy
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
4 December 202563 Pages
-
1 December 202537 Pages
-
Policy paper
A case study within the OECD’s Global Green Iron project
22 October 202564 Pages -
20 October 202555 Pages
-
Policy paper9 October 202554 Pages
-
Policy paper5 September 202546 Pages
Related publications
-
23 November 202510 Pages
-
20 October 202555 Pages
-
8 April 202547 Pages
-
4 February 20257 Pages
-
24 April 202472 Pages
-
24 April 202445 Pages
-
Policy paper
Meeting new demands for strategic intelligence
26 April 202349 Pages