Why I'm Not Worried About Running Out of Work in the Age of AI
5 hours ago
- #Job Transition
- #AI Impact
- #Comparative Advantage
- Comparative advantage theory suggests countries should specialize in what they're best at, leading to job transitions.
- Historical job losses (e.g., elevator operators) show society adapts and doesn't miss obsolete roles, despite short-term pain.
- Occupational transitions are challenging, with some workers able to shift sideways into adjacent fields but not always upward.
- Knowledge workers today have more transferable skills than 1970s auto workers, making redeployment potentially easier.
- AI's impact may not lead to unemployment but could erode income bases and compress wages in service sectors.
- There's always more work to do; management's role is prioritizing due to limited execution bandwidth, not lack of tasks.
- Jevons Paradox suggests efficiency gains lead to more usage, not less, indicating AI could create more work opportunities.
- Advice for knowledge workers: learn AI tools, focus on business outcomes, and position where the puck is going.
- Luddites opposed technology not just for job loss but for quality of life and control over work conditions.
- AI tools enable tackling previously unfeasible projects, reducing costs and time but still requiring significant effort.