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AI may take away jobs 鈥 but it鈥檚 creating some, too

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Alex Sliz/AP/File
Georgia State University students talk jobs at the Startup Student Connection job fair, March 29, 2023, in Atlanta.

The 2023 predictions were scary. Artificial intelligence would:

  • Replace 300 million full-time jobs worldwide over time.
  • Encroach on tasks of 2 in 5 workers.
  • Drive a bigger wedge between rich people and poor people.

So far, the impact of AI on the U.S. economy has proven far more limited. Examples of massive layoffs are less frequent than some expected. Some researchers now say the technology could help low-skilled workers more than it will hurt them.听

New technology always brings change and some people will lose their jobs even as new opportunities appear. But if the process unfolds over decades rather than a few years, then many employees and employers have time to adjust.

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Artificial intelligence, while eliminating some jobs, may improve productivity and lead to better customer satisfaction. Its effect on the U.S. economy so far has proved more moderate than expected.

鈥淒isruption is something we鈥檝e seen over and over,鈥 says Daniel Keum, a management professor at Columbia University. 鈥淥ver time, new industries emerge. People learn how to be productive with the technology. ... But again, the bad news hits first.鈥

Jay Johnson, who works in advertising in Chicago, was laid off recently. His industry is pushing hard to incorporate AI chatbots, which understand and generate humanlike speech, to analyze marketing trends and generate ad copy. As the sole provider for his wife and his two young children, he鈥檚 now looking for another job.

鈥淐hallenges always exist,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 how we adapt and move through them.鈥

How companies are incorporating AI

Companies are adopting the new technology in various ways. Some emphasize efficiency.

In March, IBM disclosed a 鈥渨orkforce rebalancing,鈥 reportedly in marketing and communications, that will lay off several thousand employees. Another multinational company is using AI to step up its marketing game in South America, says Dr. Keum. Instead of launching one marketing campaign per month per country, it now targets specific consumers within those countries and updates the plans weekly.

David A. Lieb/AP/File
Workers at a Medicaid call center review information regarding eligibility determinations Aug. 16, 2023, in Jefferson City, Missouri. Some companies are beginning to use artificial intelligence, or "AI assistants," to handle online chats with customers.

One sector feeling the heat: customer service. In February, Swedish consumer finance firm Klarna announced that AI was now handling two-thirds of its online chats with customers, doing the work of 700 full-time agents. Since the company uses contractors, Klarna didn鈥檛 have to fire anybody. It announced a hiring freeze instead. The company still relies on experienced workers to handle complex or sensitive cases, according to a spokesperson.听

It鈥檚 this human-machine collaboration 鈥 rethinking and redesigning work in light of AI 鈥 that will separate winnersfrom losers, says Erik Brynjolfsson, director of Stanford University鈥檚 Digital Economy Laboratory and co-founder of Workhelix, a consulting firm. In a research 听published last year, he and six co-authors found that the introduction of an AI assistant not only improved productivity of customer support workers at a large software firm, but also led to better customer satisfaction and reduced worker turnover.听

Moreover, the technology didn鈥檛 drive a wedge between the most- and least-skilled workers; it instead helped bridge the knowledge gap, Dr. Brynjolfsson adds. AI boosted productivity for new workers and the least skilled workers by 34%, while it had negligible effects for the most skilled. By investing in retraining and work redesign, while keeping people in charge, 鈥測ou can create a huge amount of value for the customers,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat is a pretty optimistic story.鈥

Where job losses are landing听

Which story is winning out 鈥 layoffs or happier, more productive employees 鈥 is hard to discern.

Tech sector layoffs surged in 2023 as Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Microsoft poured billions of dollars into AI. The pace of firings has barely diminished this year with more than 75,000 worldwide, according to Layoffs.fyi, a tracker of tech layoffs started by a Bay Area entrepreneur. While companies point to various factors, such as post-pandemic restructuring and cost-cutting, they鈥檙e increasingly hesitant to mention AI.

Elaine Thompson/AP/File
Employees walk through Amazon's headquarters Nov. 13, 2018, in Seattle. Tech sector layoffs rose in 2023 as Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Microsoft poured billions of dollars into AI.

Why? Companies may want to avoid public backlash for replacing people with machines, said Andrew Challenger, senior vice president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, in a company press release in March. The Chicago-based outplacement firm started tracking AI-related layoffs last year and found 3,900 in a single month. By the first quarter of this year, that total had dwindled to 383 for all three months.

Job losses are only part of the problem. Workers may find new jobs, but if those positions pay substantially less, their standard of living falls. That鈥檚 what happened to many manufacturing workers in the 1980s and 1990s, displaced by robotics and a wave of globalization. It鈥檚 happening now for a new class of well-educated workers.

Demand for skilled AI workers

Those with high-level AI skills are in strong demand from companies eager to take advantage of the technology. 鈥淲e鈥檙e hiring dozens,鈥 says Robert Murphy, chief economist for Infineo, a tech company aiming to revolutionize life insurance through AI and blockchain technology. Some companies pay the most skilled workers $900,000 or more in salary and benefits.听

Three-quarters of knowledge workers say they already use AI on the job, nearly double the share of just six months ago, according to a of workers and employers in the United States and 30 other countries released Wednesday. 鈥2024 is the year AI at work gets real.鈥

Other well-educated workers have found themselves on the wrong side of the technology.听

After earning her Ph.D in art history in 2017, Allison Harbin became a researcher for academic journals. Once ChatGPT was released publicly in 2022, a fifth of her income dried up. She took a job doing 鈥減rompt engineering鈥 鈥 editing AI chatbots鈥 responses during their training. But the pay was low, and even with a new job, her income still isn鈥檛 stable.听

鈥淚鈥檓 not even going to put this on my r茅sum茅,鈥 she says.听

鈥淥ld jobs are going to be eliminated,鈥 says Dr. Brynjolfsson of Stanford. 鈥淭here鈥檚 just a lot of creative destruction and churn. [However], the tools [of AI], when used correctly, will help rebuild the middle class and will help create more widely shared prosperity.鈥

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