Monday, January 26, 2026

AI’s rise stirs excitement, sparks job worries

By Jeffrey Dastin and Andrea Shalal

NEW YORK, Dec 4 (Reuters) – Panelists at the Reuters NEXT conference in New York sidestepped concerns about an artificial intelligence bubble, focusing instead on the transformative effects of AI and how it may upend work and job growth.

Artificial intelligence represents the biggest technological upheaval to the world economy since the rise of the internet a quarter-century ago. It has ​brought trillions of dollars of investment and dizzying stock-market gains, but also a shortage of memory chips, regulatory scrutiny, and rising anxiety about job displacement.

The numbers are eye-popping. In the first half of ‌2025, AI-related capital expenditures contributed more to GDP growth than the consumer, according to JP Morgan Asset Management. Investment advisory Bespoke Investment Group recently estimated about one-third of the rise in global market cap since the introduction of AI assistant ChatGPT comes from 28 AI-related companies.

Corporate executives ‌at Reuters NEXT on Wednesday and Thursday largely focused on how AI would transform work, though some talked about the threat to jobs. “All (of our customers) are focused on slowing headcount growth,” said May Habib, CEO and co-founder of AI startup Writer. “This has happened just in the last few weeks. You close a customer, you get on the phone with the CEO to kick off the project, and it’s like, ‘Great, how soon can I whack 30% of my team?'”

SAP CEO Christian Klein said that at a recent company town hall, the top question from employees was how their jobs would be impacted by AI. “We are rolling out AI across the company, even my general counsel, my legal department, is not secure, something that ⁠you can do more efficiently with AI,” he said.

FEARS OF JOB UPHEAVAL

The fears ‌about job displacement brought on by the AI boom are backed by a U.S. Federal Reserve report noting data and surveys that say artificial intelligence is already replacing entry-level positions and causing companies to trim hiring plans. An August Reuters/Ipsos poll showed 71% were concerned AI will be “putting too many people out of work permanently.”

Striking a more optimistic tone that ‍became one theme of the Reuters NEXT conference, economist Joseph Lavorgna, counselor to the U.S. Treasury secretary, said the focus should be on how the technology could enhance labor rather than replace it. “AI is an incredible tool that I think is complementary to the existing workforce,” he said. “We need policies that are going to encourage businesses to invest, and AI is a complement to it.”

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