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AI hasn't killed jobs, but may reshape early careers.
26 Mar
Summary
- AI has not yet caused widespread job losses.
- Younger workers face uneven impacts in the labor market.
- AI adoption may widen the skills gap among workers.

Anthropic's latest research suggests that while AI is rapidly changing work, it has not yet resulted in substantial job displacement. A healthy labor market shows no material difference in unemployment rates between workers using AI extensively and those in less AI-exposed roles.
However, beneath this stable surface, early impacts are unevenly distributed, with younger workers showing vulnerability. Projections indicate AI could significantly reduce entry-level white-collar jobs within five years, necessitating proactive monitoring and policy responses.
The report also highlights a growing skills gap. Earlier AI adopters are more adept at leveraging these tools for complex tasks, potentially widening existing outcome differences. Workers skilled in AI augmentation are becoming more in-demand, further differentiating labor market outcomes.
AI adoption is also concentrated in high-income countries and areas with knowledge workers, suggesting it may amplify existing advantages for the wealthy rather than acting as an equalizer.




