Field Notes/Video

How will AI impact the jobs market?

AI's effect on employment is real and uneven, with entry-level roles already shrinking while new opportunities remain hard to see.

Overview

A panel of business operators, technologists, a politician, and recent graduates debate whether AI will cause net job losses or simply shift the kinds of work humans do. The conversation covers concrete data on declining entry-level hiring, the macro risk of gutting consumer purchasing power, and the policy challenge of keeping AI value inside the UK economy rather than exporting it to US tech giants.

Key takeaways

A 16% drop in entry-level jobs and 28% fall in graduate roles signal a real and present disruption, not a future one.

Firms saving costs by cutting staff collectively destroy consumer purchasing power, undermining the very demand that sustains their revenues.

AI differs from past tools because it can replace the worker entirely, not just augment them, as the self-driving car replaces the driver.

Routine jobs being displaced are the same jobs that build foundational competence, leaving future workers unable to critique AI outputs.

Nations that outsource AI development to foreign companies export the associated jobs and wealth, compounding domestic employment risk.

Worth quoting

"Some sectors will see 20 to 30% unemployment — unheard of numbers really — but that's not a challenge of AI, that's a challenge of a choice of the capitalists who run businesses."

"What has been very scarce — software development, numerical jobs, analytical jobs — that will be much easier to do with technology, and I think the value of human relations and human connection is going to go up very significantly."

"You're outsourcing AI to other economies instead of building stuff within your economy that can create more jobs — you're basically giving it all away across the Atlantic, and that's a massive risk."

Watch the full video on YouTube
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