Elektriker

AUTOMATISIERUNGSRISIKO
BERECHNET
5%
Risikostufe
UMFRAGE
21%
Basierend auf 993 Stimmen
ARBEITSNACHFRAGE
WACHSTUM
7,1%
bis zum Jahr 2032
LÖHNE
60.240 $
oder 28,96 $ pro Stunde
Volumen
690.050
ab dem 2022
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG
ARBEITSPUNKTZAHL
7,7/10

Möchten Sie diese Zusammenfassung auf Ihrer Website? Einbettungscode:

Automatisierungsrisiko

5% (Minimales Risiko)

Minimales Risiko (0-20%): Berufe in dieser Kategorie haben eine geringe Wahrscheinlichkeit, automatisiert zu werden, da sie in der Regel komplexe Problemlösungen, Kreativität, starke zwischenmenschliche Fähigkeiten und ein hohes Maß an manueller Geschicklichkeit erfordern. Diese Jobs beinhalten oft komplexe Handbewegungen und präzise Koordination, was es für Maschinen schwierig macht, die erforderlichen Aufgaben zu replizieren.

Weitere Informationen darüber, was dieser Wert ist und wie er berechnet wird, sind verfügbar hier.

Einige sehr wichtige Eigenschaften des Jobs sind schwer zu automatisieren:

  • Enge Arbeitsfläche, Unbequeme Positionen

Einige ziemlich wichtige Eigenschaften des Jobs sind schwer zu automatisieren:

  • Fingerfertigkeit

  • Manuelle Geschicklichkeit

  • Überzeugung

Benutzerumfrage

21% Chance auf vollständige Automatisierung in den nächsten zwei Jahrzehnten

Unsere Besucher haben abgestimmt, dass es eine geringe Chance gibt, dass dieser Beruf automatisiert wird. Diese Einschätzung wird weiterhin durch das berechnete Automatisierungsrisiko unterstützt, welches eine 5% Chance der Automatisierung schätzt.

Was denken Sie, ist das Risiko der Automatisierung?

Wie hoch ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass Elektriker in den nächsten 20 Jahren durch Roboter oder künstliche Intelligenz ersetzt wird?






Gefühl

Die folgenden Grafik(en) werden überall dort eingefügt, wo es eine erhebliche Anzahl von Stimmen gibt, um aussagekräftige Daten zu liefern. Diese visuellen Darstellungen zeigen die Ergebnisse von Nutzerumfragen über die Zeit und liefern einen bedeutenden Hinweis auf Stimmungstrends.

Gefühlslage über die Zeit (jährlich)

Wachstum

Schnelles Wachstum im Vergleich zu anderen Berufen

Die Anzahl der 'Electricians' Stellenangebote wird voraussichtlich um 7,1% bis 2032 steigen.

Gesamtbeschäftigung und geschätzte Stellenangebote

* Daten des Bureau of Labor Statistics für den Zeitraum zwischen 2021 und 2031
Aktualisierte Prognosen sind fällig 09-2023.

Löhne

Mäßig bezahlt im Vergleich zu anderen Berufen

Im Jahr 2022 betrug das mittlere Jahresgehalt für 'Electricians' 60.240 $, oder 28 $ pro Stunde.

'Electricians' wurden 30,1% höher bezahlt als der nationale Medianlohn, der bei 46.310 $ lag.

Löhne über die Zeit

* Daten vom Bureau of Labor Statistics

Volumen

Deutlich größerer Bereich an Arbeitsmöglichkeiten im Vergleich zu anderen Berufen

Ab dem 2022 waren 690.050 Personen als 'Electricians' in den Vereinigten Staaten beschäftigt.

Dies entspricht etwa 0,47% der erwerbstätigen Bevölkerung im ganzen Land.

Anders ausgedrückt, ist etwa 1 von 214 Personen als 'Electricians' beschäftigt.

Stellenbeschreibung

Installieren, warten und reparieren Sie elektrische Verkabelungen, Geräte und Einrichtungen. Stellen Sie sicher, dass die Arbeit gemäß den relevanten Vorschriften ausgeführt wird. Möglicherweise installieren oder warten Sie auch Straßenbeleuchtungen, Gegensprechanlagen oder elektrische Steuersysteme.

SOC Code: 47-2111.00

Ressourcen

Wenn Sie darüber nachdenken, eine neue Karriere zu beginnen oder den Job zu wechseln, haben wir ein praktisches Tool für die Jobsuche erstellt, das Ihnen möglicherweise dabei hilft, die perfekte neue Rolle zu finden.

Suchen Sie Jobs in Ihrer lokalen Umgebung

Kommentare

Hinterlassen Sie einen Kommentar

Cindy sagt
I believe the intricate details in the wiring of the actual building would be too difficult for a machine. Electricians have refined skills that are very difficult to master by just anyone! They go to school for a 5 year apprenticeship. These people are specialized professionals and we need to respect them and their profession!!
Dec 31, 2023 at 10:00
Nathan (Keine Chance) sagt
I'm a young Electrician. for doing this job, you need to work in any kind of environment. sometimes you need to identify the problem so in order to do so, you will use your hands, body, creativity and of course, knowledge. A.I. will might stand a chance on replacing us if they probably come in a humanoid form xD
Aug 19, 2023 at 03:50
hoj (Mäßig) sagt
Humanoid Robots Cleaning Your House, Serving Your Food and Running Factories

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/humanoid-robots-cleaning-house-serving-204050583.html

This will happen shortly.
Jun 26, 2023 at 10:16
Jason (Keine Chance) sagt
If you could automate trade work, then the world is pretty much all automated at that point. Think about how complicated this work is. Even though AI could feasibley figure out how to do this type of work, it's still pretty complicated and you would need crazy good robots to perform it. Then let's say you have the complex ai and robotics to do the job. When will that technology become affordable?

Buildings are constructed in a way that are not standardized. Sure some facilities could be engineered in such a way that would make robotics possible to work in, but I think this is a long way off. By the time Electricians are automated most jobs will be automated. I mean robots/Ai could do basic level clerical work before electrical construction/maintenance. I think some parts of this industry will be automated. Maybe running 500 mile lines can be done by some machines, but even so there will still need to be some kind of human supervision.

We're just not there yet. We won't be there for a while. As dumb as most construction jobs seem, they will probably be automated so far out from now that entry level lawyers have more to worry about since chatgbt can probably do basic level legal research. No machine is capable of doing much aside from maybe doing some basic prep work, which that is hardly going to replace an electrician as of now.

If anything it will just speed up jobs and potentially lower the industry, but I really don't see it making a big difference anytime soon.
Jun 20, 2023 at 10:16
Ben (Mäßig) sagt
particularly in the new installation space, I think they will be able to run cables, fit off etc... it will probably be harder in the maintenance area for a machine to make repairs.
Mar 07, 2023 at 12:19
SAY NO TO PROGRAMMING (Niedrig) sagt
Electricians are essentially a perfect blend of physical & mental work that just isn't easily replaceable as say programming is.
Feb 28, 2023 at 10:32
Kb sagt
It seems that although certain technologies for robot dexterity are being developed, it will take a while for it to created and then theres the question of adoption speed. Don't get me wrong, if the technology is developed it WILL be adopted, probably just not immediantly.

So I wouldn't worry just yet in regards to the immediate future.

The next 2 decades though, im not sure.
Feb 20, 2023 at 02:23
Benoit (Keine Chance) sagt
I think the 19% who said electricians could be replaced in the near future have very low knowledge of the complex tasks electricians have to perform. It requires a lot of thinking and makeshift problem solving along with various physical tasks that require dexterity, precision, balance and the ability to position your body in various positions only a human is capable of.
Jan 24, 2023 at 10:55
andy (Mäßig) sagt
As an electrician's apprentice, I can see how pre-fabrication AI could easily steal away the standard rough-in methods during construction. Residential housing can be streamlined easily since big developers are making the same design for 200,000 homes they build. If a standard was set that pre-fab components were to be used and shipped to the location, you wouldn't need people to wire it up.
Mar 21, 2022 at 01:51
Dave (Keine Chance) sagt
Maybe to assist with pulling wire and conduit bending perhaps. Don't think AI will replace electricians
Oct 05, 2021 at 02:14
Thomas Bach (Keine Chance) sagt
Not a chance. I’m an industrial electrician working in the automotive industry. I’m taking care of about 100 robots ( I’m responsible for my 3 manufacturing lines ) and there’s no way any robot today can do what we do. Line operators are being replaced by robots but at the same time, there’s a need for more trades. Let’s be honest, somebody has to fix them. I think I’ll be able to retire safely. It will be a major jump in technology before robots can fix other robots in industrial applications.
Sep 19, 2021 at 02:35
allgone sagt
Really not how AI progress works.

Reading comprehension went from not possible to human-level in a few years.

https://ourworldindata.org/uploads/2022/12/AI-performance_Dynabench-paper-2048x921.png
Jun 26, 2023 at 10:17
Kenneth sagt
What about AI, and its rapid advancements?
Aug 07, 2023 at 11:00
yo lads (Keine Chance) sagt
too hard to put a robot on a roof and not fall thru it, not happening anytime soon
Sep 19, 2021 at 05:50
Jake D (Keine Chance) sagt
Understanding electrical theory and the intricacies associated with it when you’re working in physical environments is way beyond what machines can do. Static electricity accumulates, grounds are needed, and a whole lot of work is put into just insulating and making electricity safe to interact with. As a lineman apprentice, I can’t imagine there’ll be a machine that can process all of that, let alone be physically capable of performing all the tasks associated with electrical work. It’s a pretty interdisciplinary field that requires a lot of critical thinking, a lot of consideration of your environment, and is incredibly dangerous.

Personally, I don’t think you can really assess the ability of this field to be automated unless you understand the actions we take to avoid getting shocked, to avoid breaking things, and the volume of equipment we use. It takes two years in trade school and four years in an apprenticeship to create a qualified electrician and even then, they are always learning. Expecting machines to pick up this work within even forty years, assuming technology keeps progressing linearly, is pretty unlikely.

I hope I’m not jinxing myself here but this does seem pretty stupid. I’m a smart guy and I routinely feel like an idiot on the job because there’s just so much to grasp and handle. Expecting a machine to be able to understand, let alone contextualize, and further implement this information is completely fantastical.
Sep 06, 2021 at 03:57
Kenneth sagt
Ai and robots are already as of this time starting to replace surgeons. Surgeons go through on average 12-15 years of schooling after highschool. The ai can already diagnose and preform surgeries better...
Aug 07, 2023 at 11:04
Kade (Keine Chance) sagt
When electricians, plumbers, and HVAC mechanics are automated, no one will have a job.
Aug 16, 2021 at 04:47
Anthony Hallam (Niedrig) sagt
theirs no way a robot has the dexterity to wire, and it doesn't even have the brain to spot a problem
Jun 04, 2021 at 04:53
Kenneth sagt
Yet Ai has the dexterity to perform heart and brain surgeries better than human surgeons and the brain to diagnose better than human doctors....
Aug 07, 2023 at 11:06
1 (Niedrig) sagt
In my opinion, the electrician is too complicated a job for robots, and in addition, the tasks of an electrician sometimes involve repairing robots, motors, or other types of machines. :)
Jan 09, 2021 at 03:09
Sam (Keine Chance) sagt
Highly dextrous job involving customer interaction, this will not be fully automated for some time.
Jan 02, 2021 at 02:31
frank (Keine Chance) sagt
nope, no chance its a trade
Aug 09, 2020 at 09:41
anonymous (Keine Chance) sagt
Electricians make complex decisions unique to individual situations and perform complex motor tasks which would be impossible to practically replicate with a robot. Truly no need to worry about this occupation becoming obsolete.
Jun 08, 2020 at 02:44
Joe (Keine Chance) sagt
If they can manufacture robots to do complex work and have the mobility to do an electricians work then no one will have a job.
May 14, 2020 at 04:32

Hinterlassen Sie eine Antwort zu diesem Beruf

Diese Seite ist durch reCAPTCHA geschützt und die Google Datenschutzbestimmungen und Nutzungsbedingungen gelten.

Personen haben sich auch angesehen

Computerprogrammierer
Rechtsanwälte
Buchhalter und Wirtschaftsprüfer
Maschinenbauingenieure
Grafikdesigner