The report Work in the Digital Era: How Technology is Transforming Work and Occupations, published by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre, reassesses the impact of digital technologies on work in Europe. Contrary to fears of mass unemployment or job polarisation, it finds that automation’s effect on net employment has been modest and often positive, with productivity gains leading to labour reallocation rather than widespread job loss.
The most profound transformation comes from digitalisation, which has restructured work organisation through greater standardisation, monitoring, and algorithmic management. Platformisation, once seen as marginal, now extends beyond gig work into traditional workplaces, reshaping how tasks are coordinated and controlled.
The analysis shows that while jobs are upgrading overall, work processes are increasingly routinised and worker autonomy constrained, creating a paradox where higher-skill roles are still subject to tighter digital oversight. Case studies highlight that outcomes differ across contexts: in Europe, strong institutions and regulation help mitigate negative effects, while in countries with weaker protections digital monitoring can erode job quality.
Ultimately, the report concludes that the digital revolution’s main impact lies in reshaping the nature and quality of work, not the quantity of jobs. Institutions, regulation, and collective bargaining will be decisive in ensuring these technological shifts improve rather than degrade working conditions across Europe.