Post by Deepandar Rathore
Physical AI, Supply Chain & Digital Transformation Leader | Predictive Maintenance | Fleet Sustainment | Operations Strategy
AI Will Change Jobs — But It May Create More Than It Replaces Much of the conversation around AI today focuses on job displacement. But the bigger story may actually be job transformation. A growing body of global research suggests that AI is far more likely to reshape tasks and roles than eliminate entire professions. For instance, the World Economic Forum estimates that technological shifts — including AI — could create around 170 million new jobs globally by 2030 while displacing about 92 million, resulting in a net gain of roughly 78 million roles. At the same time, organizations are already seeing productivity gains. Analysis by PwC PwC India of nearly one billion job ads across six continents shows that workers in AI-exposed roles are experiencing up to 4× faster productivity growth and about a 56% wage premium. Industry analysts see the same pattern emerging. Gartner notes that AI is more likely to transform work rather than simply replace it. In fact, many knowledge workers are already benefiting — with studies suggesting generative AI tools can save more than four hours of work per week in certain roles. Strategic insight AI may not eliminate work. Instead, it is likely to reshape tasks, redesign roles, and create entirely new categories of jobs. The real challenge may not be job loss. It may be how quickly we can reskill the workforce for the AI economy. 💭 Do you think AI will ultimately create more jobs than it replaces — or fewer? NVIDIA Google Amazon Web Services (AWS) OpenAI #Meta IBM Intel Apple TSMC Samsung Electronics ASML AMD Qualcomm Broadcom Accenture Deloitte PwC EY Boston Consulting Group (BCG) #BainAndCompany #McKinsey #TCS #Infosys #Wipro #HCLTech #RelianceIndustries #AdaniGroup #WorldEconomicForum #ArtificialIntelligence #GenerativeAI #AIInfrastructure #Semiconductors #DigitalTransformation #DigitalEconomy #CloudComputing #DataCenters #FutureOfWork #TechPolicy