Skip advert
Advertisement

Self-driving cars will cost many talented people their jobs

Mike Rutherford thinks the negatives outweigh the positives when it comes to autonomous cars

Opinion - autonomous vehicles

Car drivers and their passengers waited more than 100 years for a revolution. Then two came along at about the same time.

First, it was the arrival of pure-electric cars. But the talk is now rapidly diverting to the next big, even more revolutionary thing – autonomous vehicles.

I’m comfortable confessing that I instinctively love cars and vans that can be, er, driven. Those that drive themselves I merely, and cautiously, like. Motorised vehicles with four or more wheels and purportedly requiring zero human input at point of use just ain’t appropriate for everyone on every road.

Advertisement - Article continues below

For blind or partially sighted people, folk with other disabilities or the elderly living in the remotest areas, fair enough. Otherwise, it’s a definite no from me.

I have previous with notoriously expensive self-driving cars designed to make the roads safer (possible) and drivers redundant (inevitable). I’ve served a 30-odd-year ‘apprenticeship’ as an autonomous vehicle test passenger who, on one occasion, almost doubled as an involuntary crash test dummy.

On a surreal Sunday morning close to the foot of Mount Fuji in the late eighties, scientist-like boffins introduced me to the displeasure of sitting back and not enjoying the ride from the rear seat of a slow-moving Toyota, whose front pews were hauntingly and needlessly unoccupied. Further autonomous rides in Japan, South Korea, China, Germany and North America gave me more opportunities to not sit back and relax.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

More importantly, I feel even more uneasy about the prospects for a massive number of innocent part or full-time drivers. They’ll be cruelly robbed of their jobs, livelihoods, hope and pride when the UK passes legislation allowing cars, vans, taxis and other transport to use public highways and private land, minus their highly trained drivers.

Assisted by financial institutions, safety organisations and other interested parties, the British automotive industry establishment last week talked with greater enthusiasm than ever about such autonomous products landing in a city, town or village near you.

UK trade body the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders calls it Connected and Automated Mobility (CAM) tech, with the claimed “potential” to avert 60,000 serious collisions and save 3,900 lives between now and 2040. Plus there “could” (not “will”) be a positive annual economic impact of between £55-£77 billion, and an “estimated” extra 342,000 jobs – although only 12,250 of those will be in automotive manufacturing.

I asked the SMMT if those extra positions will be outweighed by a far larger number of job losses or redundancies for professional or semi-professional drivers of cars, taxis, vans, HGVs, PSVs and the like?

In response, the society confessed that the “displacement of existing [driver] jobs has not been factored in”.

Our dealer network has 1,000s of great value new cars in stock and available now right across the UK. Find your new car

Best deals on a used Tesla Model 3

Model 3

2021 Tesla

Model 3

54,516 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £15,500
View Model 3
Model 3

2021 Tesla

Model 3

37,457 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £16,800
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

50,616 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £19,995
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

43,100 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £18,770
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

27,237 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £20,756
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

40,579 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £19,233
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

11,124 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £30,879
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

56,104 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £18,255
View Model 3
Model 3

2023 Tesla

Model 3

41,768 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £19,300
View Model 3
Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Find a car with the experts

Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Car Deal of the Day: 717bhp BMW M5 Touring super-estate on a tasty lease deal
BMW M5 Touring - front action

Car Deal of the Day: 717bhp BMW M5 Touring super-estate on a tasty lease deal

The BMW M5 Touring is M car royalty, with a thoroughly impressive PHEV powertrain. It’s our Deal of the Day for 29 June
News
29 Jun 2025
Electric car appeal is at its lowest since 2019
Opinion - Kia EV9 GT

Electric car appeal is at its lowest since 2019

From poor electric car sales to crashes in F1, Mike Rutherford thinks its been a crazy few weeks in the automotive world
Opinion
29 Jun 2025
New Skoda Epiq vRS to headline brand’s hot-SUV onslaught
Skoda Epiq vRS exclusive image

New Skoda Epiq vRS to headline brand’s hot-SUV onslaught

Every future Skoda will get the go-faster treatment, with the brand also working on making cars sharper and more engaging
News
27 Jun 2025