The reshaping of work: technology, green shift, and global market forces

Technology development and adoption, the green transition, and macroeconomic conditions are fundamentally transforming global labor markets. The nature of work is evolving, the emergence of ‘digital work’ is introducing new opportunities for individuals to engage in work from any location, ushering in a new era of work flexibility and accessibility.

Through a strategic partnership with the World Economic Forum (WEF), Capgemini is co-leading the initiative area Shaping New Frontiers of Work. This initiative explores the twin challenges of diverging global labor market outcomes and job churn, by generating insights on data and policy direction across this space. The outputs of this collaboration will be leveraged by the Centre for the New Economy and Society to influence the decisions of public and business leaders through its extensive network of impact communities.

“Global digital jobs could help balance higher-income country skill shortages while enabling a demographic dividend in lower-income countries.”

The rise of global digital jobs

The Rise of Global Digital Jobs

If managed well, global digital jobs present an opportunity to utilize talent around the world, widening the talent pool available to employers and providing economic growth pathways to countries across the income spectrum. This requires broad access to digital infrastructure, educational and vocational training programmes, and competition on skills and talent rather than lower wages. Global employers, meanwhile, need to complement traditional approaches to enterprise workforce management with new tools, proactively expanding recruitment pools and creating a culture that embraces hybrid operating models for all workers.

This was the focus of our joint white paper with WEF, The Rise of Global Digital Jobs. The paper identifies the jobs most conducive to digital work, examining what this means for work across different sectors, demographics and income brackets.

It’s time to design a more dynamic, interconnected, and enriching future of work.

By 2030, 92 million jobs could be done remotely

What does this mean for the workforce of tomorrow? How can countries and employers make the most of this trend?

Book-image WEF The Rise of Global Digital Jobs 2024

COMING SOON! Stay tuned for our upcoming report, which builds on these insights and delves into strategies aimed at creating a successful and equitable global digital workforce.