>>5958405
No, they have robotics in development for elderly care. Korea has one that got FDA approval for trial in the US this year as an example. The thought is that advanced nations that have a shrinking population but a strong education system and invested in future technologies will have a much easier time transitioning to a new world driven by robotics and AI that will help reduce the need for manual and much of Human labor. This way these countries like Korea/Japan/etc who don't want mass immigration will just deploy these robots to offset their small populations and not have to rely on immigrants to be productive.

The problem will be with countries that don't have the technological pedigree to pull this off that will struggle to keep up. And those with fast growing populations will need to provide jobs so their people can earn a living thus robotics, AI and automation will be seen as a bane to their societies because it deprives them of jobs and income. They will push back against it.