The impact of artificial intelligence on the labor market is making workers and job seekers alike anxious about their future. But executives are optimistic that technology can continue to augment human employees’ workloads, rather than completely replacing them.
The debate over the future of work has also spread inside major AI providers.
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark, speaking at the global economic conference Semaphore in Washington, D.C., on Monday dismissed claims by Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei that AI could increase unemployment by up to 20% over the next five years.
Mr Clark has previously said accepting such high unemployment rates is almost a policy “choice”, given that a potential job market collapse will take time to materialize and is a challenge that society can cope with.
“I think there’s a selection aspect to this, but if we’re right, this technology is going to really change the world,” Clark said on stage at the conference. “It’s going to change the way we do business, it’s going to change aspects of national security, it’s going to change even how we interact as humans. And it’s impossible to reconcile that with a world where the economy doesn’t change substantially.”
fear of chaos
Anthropic is at the center of concerns about AI disruption in the stock market, resulting in a disaster for software companies. Investors suddenly found themselves vulnerable to technological obsolescence as the world moved to agent systems that took action with minimal human oversight. of iShares Expansion Technology and Software Sector ETF (IGV) has fallen more than 30% from its highs last September and is in a bear market.
These changes will force a rethinking of how employees respond to the labor market. Mr Clark noted that some industries are seeing some weakness in employment of early graduates. Clark leads The Anthropic Institute, a 30-person think tank that studies the impact of AI on the workplace.
Clark said college students entering the job market today need to understand how to analyze and connect information across many different fields. He’s not too keen on helping students build what he calls memorized programming skills.
“Thanks to AI, we now have access to any number of subject matter experts from different fields,” Clark said. “But what’s really important is knowing the right questions to ask and having an intuition about what’s interesting when you collide different insights from many different disciplines.”
Here’s what other Semafor panelists think about the impact of AI on business.
Gallup CEO John Clifton said the countries most likely to have an advantage in the future are those where a larger portion of the workforce uses AI. “We know that 50% of all employees in the United States are using AI. But one of the challenges is…are they seeing productivity gains? AI is not being used very much. Interestingly, only 13% of employees actually use AI on a daily basis,” he said.
Daniel Herscovici, president and CEO of Plume, outlined the importance of having a dedicated leader to outline a company’s AI strategy. “We have an AI czar… She’s been great and she’s dictated our strategy going forward. So I think it’s really important to appoint someone whose job is to wake up every day and work on how we implement our infrastructure.”
Asked if he’s worked less since incorporating AI into his daily life, Herscovici answered, “Absolutely not,” adding, “I’m certainly able to get more work done in an eight-, nine-, or 12-hour day.”
Salil Parekh, managing director and CEO of Infosys, said the company is focused on ensuring its employees acquire new skills using AI. “The approach we have chosen is to reskill all 300,000 employees on AI tools,” he said. “So we do a lot of work first. For the first few months of training, we encourage people, like new grads, to not use any AI tools and learn how software development is done. Then after a couple of months, we introduce them to how to use the tools and see how things are enhanced.”
