2025/03 | LEM Working Paper Series | ||||||||||||||||
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The impact of robots on workplace injuries and deaths: Empirical evidence from Europe |
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Marco De Simone, Dario Guarascio and Jelena Reljic |
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Keywords | |||||||||||||||||
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EU, robotisation, technology, workplace safety, injuries, fatalities, industrial relations
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JEL Classifications | |||||||||||||||||
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J01, J08, J28, J50, J81, L60, O33
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Abstract | |||||||||||||||||
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This paper examines the impact of robotisation on
workplace safety in EU manufacturing sectors between
2011 and 2019. To address endogeneity concerns, we
employ an instrumental variable approach and find
that robot adoption reduces both injuries and
fatalities. Specifically, a 10% increase in robot
adoption is associated with a 0.066% reduction in
fatalities and a 1.96% decrease in injuries. Our
findings highlight the context-dependent nature of
these effects. The safety benefits of robotisation
materialise only in high-tech sectors and in
countries where industrial relations provide strong
worker protections. In contrast, in traditional
industries and countries with weaker institutional
frameworks, these benefits remain largely
unrealised. The results are robust to several
sensitivity tests.
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