Jensen Huang · Fortune Technology
KPMG flagged in November that four in 10 workers fear AI could take their job
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While other business leaders are adamant AI will lead to a wider labor market disruption, the 63-year-old billionaire has remained steadfast in his assertion the technology won’t lead to mass layoffs.
Key facts
- And in March, the CEO mapped out exactly how AI could transform the workplace, predicting 100 AI agents working alongside every human worker
- Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman has said the same, and gave it about 18 months until that becomes a reality
- KPMG found in November that four in 10 workers fear AI could take their job
- The warnings about AI’s impact on jobs echo from Silicon Valley to Wall Street to Washington, D.C
Summary
The warnings about AI’s impact on jobs echo from Silicon Valley to Wall Street to Washington, D.C. In a recent interview with former National Security Advisor H.R. Instead, it’s possible you’ll be replaced by the worker who’s boosted their productivity by using AI. “It is unlikely most people will lose a job to AI,” Huang said in the interview published last week. The statement is a break from what other business leaders have warned about the technology. At the same time, there’s growing discontent among workers over AI adoption.