Looks like the Robot Revolution is coming to take
away banking jobs!
So says a Citigroup report, which predicts job
losses of up to 30% between 2015 and 2025 due to robots as reported in the
article “30%
of bank jobs are under threat”, published April 4, 2016 by Matt Egan, CNN Money.
This comes as no surprise as Bank of England had
already sounded the trumpet in November 2015, declaring that robots would take
away 80 million American and 15 million British jobs or 50% of the workforce of
these respective countries in the next 10 to 20 years as reported in the
article “Smarter
robots put 50% of jobs at risk”, published November 13, 2015 by Ivana
Kottasova, CNN Money.
So what's causing this trend?
Citibank
says robots taking banking jobs - Why Smartphones and Mobile money means banks
have to adjust.
Smartphones and the advent of mobile money is making
it easier than ever for customers to do banking on the go.
Just as Chatbots are revolutionizing the selling of
products on Social Media platforms such as Facebook as noted in my Geezam blog article entitled “How
FB Messenger Ads means Chess playing Chatbots with Fast Food Coupons”, so
too are robots revolutionizing the Banking and Investment world.
This revolution towards Robotics is part of the
Financial Technology or Fintech revolution and is receiving massive amounts of
funding according to Citi and CB Insights:
1. US$1.8
billion in 2010
2. US$19
billion in 2015
70% is customer experience focused, as nobody likes
to go to a bank anymore. Banks are responding by embracing the change, as
Citibank predicts that by 2023, 17% of banking revenue would be lost to FinTech
startups.
Some banks have been installing ATM (Automated
Teller Machines) with some even going cashless and even headless, requiring
only the smartphone screen to do banking as noted in my Geezam blog article entitled “How
US Banks upgrading to Cashless ATM as Jamaica dances with Mobile Money”.
After all, paying banking staff accounts for roughly
65% of total cost base of some of the largest banks. With US branch tellers
declining by some 15% since it hit its highest level back in 2007, the job of a
bank teller as well as back end processing and investment operations will also
fall to the rise of robots.
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