HomeNewsOpinionLayoffs: Is AI coming for white-collar jobs? Coders and analysts should worry

Layoffs: Is AI coming for white-collar jobs? Coders and analysts should worry

Studies are finding AI tools improving productivity significantly for coders, analysists and customer support agents. IMF last month warned that jobs in advanced economies were especially exposed to AI and the risk of reduced labour demand, lower wages and reduced hiring. Some jobs might simply disappear

February 08, 2024 / 16:37 IST
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Layoffs
Finance and technology accounted for around 39,000 announced layoffs in the US last month.

Are white-collar workers — think analysts, coders and even the odd opinion columnist — going the way of the medieval scribe? Finance and technology accounted for around 39,000 announced layoffs in the US last month, according to one survey, and now DocuSign Inc and Snap Inc’s 900 more signal an ongoing race to “rip the Band-Aid” and pivot to more cost-effective AI and automation. Developers are quoting Marx in online forums and wondering if they should re-train as electricians.

Shareholders don’t seem too bothered, as seen by Meta Platforms Inc.’s recent whopping $197 billion one-day market-cap gain, and neither do politicians eager to catch up in the tech race. After all, with unemployment still low, no Luddites in sight and plenty of demand, it’s easier to talk up the potential for AI to boost productivity and economic growth. The technology will not be a “mass destroyer of jobs,” Bank of England boss Andrew Bailey recently told the BBC.

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Yet simply hoping for the best is an inadequate response to the potential upheaval AI could unleash in the labour market. A raft of research is starting to scratch the surface of what goes on when AI is rolled out into the world of white-collar drudgery. Not all of it is pretty.

Experiments so far have focused on the kind of routine text-based tasks that generative AI seems best-placed to handle — like programming, professional writing and customer support guidance. Encouragingly, this technology seems to work better as a companion to workers rather than as a replacement for them. One study looking at Microsoft Corp and OpenAI’s
GitHub Copilot, an AI assistant that offers coders suggestions and prompts, found that those using the tool completed a task on average 55.8% faster. Another study found that workers using ChatGPT for tasks including press releases or analysis plans completed them 10 minutes faster and also saw quality rise. And another found that customer support agents using AI assistants completed 14 percent more tasks per hour.

These studies also suggest AI’s gains flowed more to workers with less experience (which may explain why tech’s Young Turks seem keener on these tools versus the old guard). The optimistic reading here is that instead of cutting a swathe through the office, AI could be a productivity tool that educates and trains those lower down the ladder while also freeing up more time for older colleagues. Computer scientist J.C.R. Licklider imagined this kind of ideal “Man-Computer Symbiosis” in 1960, complaining that 85% of his thinking time was spent “getting in a position to think” by recording information or arranging it, like plotting graphs, instead of on more productive work.