Will AI take your job? An economic study by Anthropic may give you a hint. But the answer is complicated

Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights

Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles carefully curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 |  Week 443, March 6-12 , 2026. | Archive

Will AI take your job? An economic study by Anthropic may give you a hint. But the answer is complicated

By Jeremy Kahn | Fortune | March 10, 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. According to the author, two of the questions he gets most frequently when he tells people that he covers AI and writes a book on the subject is: am I going to lose my job? And, what should my kids study?  These questions are difficult to answer. He often falls back on saying that he doubts there will be mass unemployment, which is not the same thing as saying your particular job is safe. And he says that it is important to teach kids to be lifelong learners, which isn’t a very satisfying response.
  2. A new research paper from economists Maxim Massenkoff and Peter McCrory at the AI company Anthropic assesses how exposed various professions are to AI by looking at the percentage of tasks in that field that the technology could potentially automate. They also try to gauge the gap between this total possible exposure, and the extent to which AI is currently being used to automate those tasks, a measure they call “observed exposure.”  For instance, AI is having relatively large impacts on fields involving office administration and computers and math, but relatively little on things like life sciences and social sciences or healthcare, even though those two areas have relatively high potential exposures. Then there are those areas with very low potential exposure, such as construction and agriculture, where, in fact, Anthropic finds the observed exposure is, indeed, almost nil. 
  3. In the end, the most honest answer to both questions—will I lose my job, and what should my kids study?—may be: according to the author he doesn’t know, and no one else does either.  Also because the Anthropic economists also note that economists’ track records when it comes to predicting occupational change is poor. 

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  AI and Employment, Life-long Learning, Technology and Society

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply