back scratched but without the inconvenience of walkies and feeding times. twenty seventeen pepper got a lot of attention with his coffee service he serves a hot drink of choice without bothering the client with small talk. you won t get it and you get back to work it s a. it s. a good deal easier from. robots like this one are already showing they can take over simple tasks like making deliveries. when this m learns to complete tasks quickly and precisely many assembly line workers will have to start fearing for their jobs as a new piece of automation comes then people just move to something else but only at that time he was going to do. the scope of jobs that robots are able to do is growing rapidly pretty soon farmers won t need farm hands anymore to feed their
two thousand and eight year the global financial crisis slightly less good news the chance of finding what varies from country to country and some companies are complaining they can t find enough skilled. czech firm limit his desperate for more workers. the hospital bed manufacturer has seven hundred employees an annual sales of two hundred seventy million euros it could increase those figures if it could only hire more assembly line workers service technicians logistics specialists and engineers. many other check companies have the same problem as linnet. the czech republic has the lowest unemployment rate in the e.u. at two point seven percent this compares to germany with joblessness at three point six percent across the block unemployment stands at seven point four percent on average that s a total of more than eighteen million people. the jobless rate is highest in
when you build cars for your japanese firm. we love it. try building your cars in the united states instead of shipping them over. is that possible to ask? that s not rude. is that rude? i don t think so. now, to be fair, you heard there were other comments before and there are some after that praising the japanese as job creators in the u.s. but a lot of people rushed in to correct and school the president on automotive history. japanese automakers operate 24 plants and 43 r&d facilities in 20 of our states. they average 4 million cars a year. they are huge u.s. employers. toyota for one exports the cars they make in america all over the world. the whole thing was a big deal back when so much of the car business moved here from japan in the 80s. japanese trucks made in america. these men are called technicians. not assembly line workers at this brand new nissan plant in
technicians, not assembly line workers at this brand-new nissan brandt in smir that, tennessee. the plant sits on 1,300 acres of what used to be rolling bluegrass. workers inside produce as many as 280,000 toyota cam riz a year. it was dedication time for honda s first u.s. auto manufacturing plant. one million square feet of it. the newest in technology with the capacity to turn out 150,000 cars a year. so you see, that s how it got started. and even though car industry types believe the president had his automotive history wrong this weekend and some of them said so, aaron blake of the washington post defended the president s comments in context and something of a newsletter to his cohorts in the media. the headline screamed stop cherry picking that trump quote about japanese cars. it s not what you think. noted. that is our broadcast for tonight. thank you for being here with us. my thanks to ali velshi and
bloomberg says in 1999, 85% of the cars manufactured in this country. now it s down to 52%. man, just going like this. it s difficult. my heart breaks for them. looking at the average salary of the assembly line workers, between $25,000 and $50,000. they get bonuses, benefits, pension. average salary $25,000 to $50,000 depending on years of service and not like they re making a million dollars a year and working hard and now an opportunity to reap some of the benefits for the sacrifices they made in 09, they re penalized. hunt die, south carolina, bmw, they would say, they got jobs. they got jobs. that s what this is all about. all right. we ll see what happens with that contract, when we drive. thank you. thank you. they re cleared for liftoff. hundreds of balloons heading up, up into the heavens for the 44th annual international balloon