Abstract

German companies have been affected by a new wave of digitalization during the past years, and this has led to responses both in the way production is organized and in the goals of the German industrial policy. The coordinated response is widely referred to as “Industry 4.0” and is intended to support German industries in the increasingly fierce competition for global leadership in manufacturing. Simultaneously, a social science debate about changes in work and in employee training began and continues to this day. Far-reaching predictions of fundamental change circulate, especially concerning the organization of work and worker competence requirements. Other issues include also the needs and opportunities of firm-based competence development at work as well as the role and the uses of digital media. In recent years, more empirical studies have become available for clarifying open questions, and this paper presents three main results from one such study based on case investigations in 10 German industrial firms. First, digitalization does not change industrial production work radically. There is no general trend of upskilling, downgrading, or reskilling. A moderate trend favoring upgrading is observable, however. Thus, traditional workforce competences are not becoming “obsolete.” Rather, in the context of automation, they are being complemented by other skills including new technical qualifications in information technology as well as the ability to take a more theoretical approach to problem-solving in process optimization. Second, our results confirm more cautious assessments of the need for accelerated continuing vocational training. They also make it clear that the potential for increased learning opportunities in digital work and for the increased use of digital media in continuing vocational training has been overestimated. Learning opportunities seem to decrease rather than increase with digital work. Moreover, the use of digital media in continuing vocational training is limited due to organizational, financial, and cultural constraints and due to the lack of knowledge about the effectiveness of digital learning environments. Third, a number of organizational measures are needed to manage change. One measure would be to integrate new skill requirements into a binding institutional curriculum for education and training. Another measure would be to make on-the-job learning opportunities a central aspect of how work is organized.

Highlights

  • Like other industrialized countries within and outside Europe, Germany recently augmented its national industrial policy (Krzywdzinski, 2017, p. 245)

  • Job Task Profiles: New Accents, Not Radical Change The German history of work in industrial production was and still is a history of the incremental transformation of tasks, performance conditions, and competence requirements caused by the design of technology and organization

  • The thesis is that digitalization should make the typical tasks of skilled and semiskilled industrial labor disappear because these tasks can be automated

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Summary

Introduction

Like other industrialized countries within and outside Europe, Germany recently augmented its national industrial policy (Krzywdzinski, 2017, p. 245). An essential component of this strategy is the establishment of new production concepts based on the networking of all processes via the internet, new digital assistance systems, and novel automation solutions. In this context, the promoters of Industry 4.0 emphasized the new role of the workforce as “conductors of technology” The debate in the social sciences about the effects of Industry 4.0 on work, competence requirements, and qualification opportunities did not give much credence to this envisaged scenario. An increasing number of contributions are based on empirical studies, there is still a discrepancy between the scope of the debate and its empirical foundations. On the basis of the author’s own extensive case study–based empirical work, an attempt is made to clarify a number of open questions related to industrial work and continuing training

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