As baby boomers retire, German businesses turn to robots

(This Oct. 27 story has been corrected to change the name of the Daimler Truck works council chairman to Michael Brecht, not Matthias Krust, in paragraph 23)

By Maria Martinez

BERLIN (Reuters) - At machine parts producer S&D Blech, the head of the grinding unit is retiring. With Germany's acute labour shortage leaving few candidates to take on the skilled but dirty and hazardous manual work, the company will replace him with a robot.

Other small and medium-sized companies are also turning to automation as the gradual exit from the workplace of Germany's post-war "baby boom" generation tightens the labour squeeze.

Some 1.7 million German jobs were unfilled in June, official data shows. The German Chambers of Commerce and Industry (DIHK) says more than half of companies are struggling to fill vacancies, at an estimated cost to growth in Europe's largest economy of nearly 100 billion euros ($109 billion) per year.

Managing director Henning Schloeder cited that trend to explain S&D Blech's push over several years towards automation and digitalisation, saying: "This will further aggravate the already difficult skilled labour situation, particularly in production and crafts."

Finding a new head of the grinding unit was hard "not only because of all the experience he has, but also because it's a back-breaking job that no one wants to do any more", Schloeder told Reuters.

Machine-grinding involves high heat and continuous noise, while the sparks it throws out can be dangerous.

More women working and a surge in immigration have helped compensate for demographic changes in recent years in Germany.

But with baby boomers retiring and a new cohort - much smaller, due to low birth rates - joining the labour force, the Federal Employment Agency expects the pool of workers to shrink by 7 million people by 2035.

With similar shifts affecting other developed economies, the impact of advanced automation technologies from robotics to AI will be widely felt, said Nela Richardson, chief economist at global payrolls and HR services provider ADP.

"Long term, all those innovations are a game-changer for the world of work. Everybody will do their job differently," she told Reuters.

Heavy investment in automation by car makers and other industrial giants means Germany is already the world's fourth-biggest market for robots, and the largest in Europe.

But as robots become cheaper and easier to operate, the often family-run Mittelstand companies that are the country's economic backbone are also using them, from manufacturers like S&D Blech to bakeries, laundries and supermarkets.