The report Job Creation and Local Economic Development 2024: The Geography of Generative AI examines the health of regional labour markets and provides new estimates on regional labour shortages. In addition, it provides new findings on the impact of Generative AI on different regions and workers. It examines how AI technologies can be leveraged to address critical labour market challenges and boost productivity growth.
Job Creation and Local Economic Development 2024 - Country Notes: Colombia
The state of regional labour markets
Copy link to The state of regional labour marketsIn Colombia the employment rate in 2023 varies across regions, ranging from a low of 39.7% in Chocó to 74% in Nariño. This represents a difference of 34.3 percentage points, above the average OECD regional dispersion of 10 percentage points. The national employment rate in Colombia stands at 59.5%, below the OECD benchmark of 69.4%.
By 2023, less than half of (10 out of 24) of Colombian regions saw their employment recover to at least pre-pandemic levels. In Colombia, Bogotá Capital District, Bolívar, Boyacá, Cesar, Córdoba (CO), Chocó, La Guajira, Magdalena, Meta, Norte de Santander, Quindío, Risaralda, Sucre, and Tolima employment did not return to pre-crisis levels. Cauca experienced the greatest recovery for employment rates, surpassing the pre-pandemic level by 4.8 percentage points. Overall, employment rates are 1.6 percentage points below pre-crisis levels, a stronger recovery than the regional OECD average of 1.5 percentage points.
Over the past ten years, the gap in participation rates between prime-age and younger workers (age inclusion gap) increased in 20 out of 23 regions in Colombia, on average by 6.6 percentage points. The age inclusion gap grew by 1.3 percentage points across OECD regions. The biggest decrease in age disparities occurred in Cauca and Meta at -2.5 percentage points, while the biggest increase was in La Guajira by 16.1 percentage points. Over the same period, the gap in participation rates between male and female workers (gender inclusion gap) increased in 12 out of 23 regions. The gender inclusion gap fell by, on average, 0.3 percentage points. The biggest increase in gender disparities was in Huila and Norte de Santander by 8.4 percentage points, while the biggest decrease was in Caquetá at -8.3 percentage points.
In Colombia, no (0 out of 24 regions with available data) have youth not in employment, education, or training (NEET) rates below the OECD benchmark of 16.8%, while the regional mean stands at 31%. The highest rate of youth exclusion is observed in Chocó at 51.3%, while the lowest rate is in Bogotá Capital District at 22.9%. This underscores the uneven opportunities for youth across the country.
In 0 out of 24 regions in Colombia, labour productivity is above the OECD benchmark. Meta leads labour productivity levels at 92% above the regional average. The lowest labour productivity is observed in Nariño at -53% below the national average. Annual labour productivity growth in Colombia over the past ten years is at 1.8%, above the OECD regional average of 0.9%. The strongest labour productivity growth is observed in Tolima at 4.2% annual growth, and the weakest in Cesar where labour productivity fell by 1% annually.
In Colombia, jobs requiring high skill levels dominate in 1 out of the 33 regions. Bogotá Capital District stands out with the highest share of high-skill jobs (41%), below the OECD average of 44%. La Guajira has the highest proportion of medium-skill jobs, above the OECD benchmark of 30%. The share of low-skill jobs ranges from 33.4% in Bogotá Capital District to 62.5% in Huila, highlighting notable regional variation in job skill composition.
Skill mismatches are less prevalent in Colombia than in the OECD overall: 41% of workers are in jobs that do not match their educational skill level, compared to 35% across OECD regions. This ranges from 50% mismatched workers in La Guajira to 34% in Bogotá Capital District.
AI and automation technologies in regional labour markets in Colombia
Copy link to AI and automation technologies in regional labour markets in ColombiaAI has the potential to transform local labour markets by boosting productivity, creating or destroying jobs, and changing the very nature of some jobs, including job quality. While the full extent of its impact is still uncertain, the effects on jobs or skills will likely be context- and place specific. This report explores both the observed and anticipated impacts of technologies, both AI and non-AI, as they mature and achieve widespread adoption.
Narrow-purposed technologies in local labour markets
Even before the emergence of Generative AI, the impact of automation technologies differed across local labour markets. This measure of risk of automation serves as a useful metric to examine the effects of narrow-purposed technologies, these are, technologies (digital or not) that are intended to help with or take over one or a few specific tasks. The metrics presented below explore the share of jobs at risk of automation given available technologies at the end of 2021.
In Colombia, on average around 14% of workers are considered at high risk of automation, meaning over 25% of its skills and abilities are highly automatable. This is 2 percentage points more than the OECD average of 12%. This figure ranges from 10.4% in Caquetá to 28.1% in La Guajira.
Regional employment exposed to Generative AI
In Colombia, on average around 23.4% of workers are exposed to Generative AI, meaning 20% (or more) of their job tasks could be done in half the time with the help of Generative AI. This is -2.6 percentage points less han the OECD average of 26%. This figure ranges from 13.1% in Cauca to 32% in Bogotá Capital District.
OECD regions previously only mildly at risk of automation are now significantly exposed to Generative AI and vice versa. There tends to be a negative correlation between the share of exposed workers to Generative AI and a region’s share of workers at high risk of automation.
The concentration of industries within or outside cities drives disparities in Generative AI exposure between urban and non-urban labour markets. Certain industries, such as financial services or technology development, often concentrate around metropolitan areas while non-metropolitan or rural areas tend to rely on industries with a different production structure, such as agriculture or manufacturing. Similarly, workers are also spatially concentrated with highly skilled workers often being more present in clusters in or around a few metropolitan areas.
The share of workers exposed to Generative AI is larger in urban areas compared to rural areas by 17.9 percentage points, which makes more urban areas exposed 2.9 times more exposed than non-urban areas. This gap is larger than average as across OECD countries urban areas are 1.8 times more exposed than non-urban areas.
References
OECD (2024), Job Creation and Local Economic Development 2024: The Geography of Generative AI https://doi.org/10.1787/83325127-en
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