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AI: Davos Leaders Fear Job Loss, Urge Calm
24 Jan
Summary
- AI's impact on jobs is a major concern, with fewer jobs predicted.
- Leaders emphasize steady navigation amidst AI's disruptive consequences.
- Despite risks, AI offers significant productivity gains and economic upside.

Leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos expressed a mix of caution and opportunity regarding artificial intelligence, acknowledging its profound impact on jobs, governance, and power structures. A consistent theme was the paradox of adopting AI rapidly while confronting its disruptive consequences, pushing leaders to act decisively yet accept ambiguity.
Economist Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala advised leaders facing policy uncertainty not to "hyperventilate," urging a grounded approach. Discussions on employment highlighted concerns; Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase predicted fewer jobs in the next five years, stressing the need for retraining. Similarly, Deloitte's CEO Joe Ucuzoglu noted inevitable labor disruption, cautioning about potential inequality and political tension without coordinated action.
Productivity gains from AI were recognized, with Nasdaq's President and CEO Adena Friedman citing high ROI in early deployments. However, scaling AI requires significant capital and cultural change. The IMF's Kristalina Georgieva described AI's labor market impact as a "tsunami," particularly for young workers, warning of risks to wages and middle-class stability without regulation.



