Original Reddit post

This is a very good article in the Washington Post (free “gift” link below) about the impact AI might have on jobs. This evaluates both which jobs are most likely to go away as well as how easily the people in those jobs will likely find other jobs. At the very bottom, it concedes that AI might also create jobs that don’t even exist yet, much as other technologies have in the past: Economists say it’s nearly impossible to forecast AI’s effect on the labor market from the current capabilities of the technology or the business sectors it’s seeping into first. And they point to the track record of past technology revolutions, such as electricity and smartphones, that eliminated some types of jobs but also created new work and economic growth few foresaw. The predictions mostly didn’t pan out from a prominent study more than a decade ago that estimated nearly half of jobs could be destroyed by computer automation. Forecasts were off base that ATMs would wipe out bank tellers , that earlier forms of AI would decimate radiologists and that player pianos would kill the jobs of pianists . Few people imagined that smartphones would usher in new jobs in social media marketing and influencing . And you’re probably not experiencing the 15-hour workweek that economist John Maynard Keynes forecasted in 1930. “We do not have a good track record of predicting how technological change will play out in the labor market,” said Martha Gimbel, executive director of the Budget Lab at Yale University. It would have been hard to predict that the invention of electricity would lead to the new occupation of elevator operators, and that a subsequent innovation — “buttons,” she said — would wipe out those jobs. Another extinct occupation, telephone switchboard operators, offers reasons for both hope and pessimism about AI’s effects. It was once one of the most common jobs for American women, but jobs were wiped out as telephones modernized starting in the early 20th century, according to a research paper published in 2024 by James Feigenbaum and Daniel Gross. Switchboard operators who lost their jobs were far more likely than their peers to never find other work or to take lower-paying jobs, the research found. But within years, new opportunities opened for young women as secretarial and restaurant work boomed. “I read that as somewhat hopeful,” Feigenbaum, a Boston University economic historian, said in an interview. Feigenbaum doesn’t buy the argument that AI will be much different for American workers than prior technology revolutions. The invention of electricity, the internal combustion engine and the internet were massively transformative technologies, he said, and “that didn’t eliminate all jobs.” See which jobs are most threatened by AI and who may be able to adapt , Washington Post, March 16, 2026 submitted by /u/GregHullender

Originally posted by u/GregHullender on r/ArtificialInteligence