26.6 C
Accra
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
WorldReport shows AI could take over 300 million jobs

Date:

Report shows AI could take over 300 million jobs

According to a report by investment bank Goldman Sachs, artificial intelligence (AI) might replace the equivalent of 300 million full-time jobs.

That might result in a quarter of work duties in the US and Europe being replaced, but it might also create new jobs and boost productivity.

Also, it may eventually result in a 7% annual rise in the value of all goods and services produced globally.

The report calls generative AI “a major advancement” since it can produce content that is indistinguishable from human-produced stuff.

The government is keen to promote investment in AI in the UK, which it says will “ultimately drive productivity across the economy”, and has tried to reassure the public about its impact.

“We want to make sure that AI is complementing the way we work in the UK, not disrupting it – making our jobs better, rather than taking them away,” Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan told the Sun.

The report notes AI’s impact will vary across different sectors – 46% of tasks in administrative and 44% in legal professions could be automated but only 6% in construction 4% in maintenance, it says.

According to research cited by the report, 60% of workers are in occupations that did not exist in 1940.

But other research suggests technological change since the 1980s has displaced workers faster than it has created jobs.

And if generative AI is like previous information-technology advances, the report concludes, it could reduce employment in the near term.

The long-term impact of AI, however, was highly uncertain, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation think tank Torsten Bell told BBC News, “so all firm predictions should be taken with a very large pinch of salt”.

“We do not know how the technology will evolve or how firms will integrate it into how they work,” he said.

“That’s not to say that AI won’t disrupt the way we work – but we should focus too on the potential living-standards gains from higher-productivity work and cheaper-to-run services, as well as the risk of falling behind if other firms and economies better adapt to technological change.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBX_lI822P4
[forminator_poll id="710479"]

Latest stories

E-passports will stop fraud and protect identities – Foreign Minister

The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, has...

I will sign anti-gay bill without delay if I become president – Bawumia

The flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Dr....

OSP probes food-sharing by Lydia Alhassan during special voting

The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) has initiated...

Phase II of Tema Motorway Interchange inaugrated by Akufo-Addo

President Akufo-Addo has inaugurated the Phase II of the...

Ras Mubarak drags MTN to Court over failed roaming service

A former Member of Parliament (MP) for Kumbungu, Abdulai...

$2m spent weekly on onion imports as Ghana struggles with food security

Peasant Farmers Association of Ghana (PFAG) have revealed that...

Related stories

Biden grants full pardon to son Hunter amid criminal sentencing

US President Joe Biden has granted a full and...

Court issues 2-year suspended death sentence to former Bank of China Chair for bribery, others

Former Bank of China chairman Liu Liange on Tuesday received...

Ghanaians among UN peacekeepers injured in Southern Lebanon attacks

The UN peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon has reported...

Russia denies Trump told Putin to restrain Ukraine war efforts

The Kremlin has rejected media reports suggesting that US...

More than 100 detained as protesters defy Amsterdam’s ban on protests

Dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested in Amsterdam on...

Traffic jam erupts as cyclists from Zhengzhou to Kaifeng for dumplings

A social media trend that began as a lighthearted...

Adin Ross wins $1.6m on Trump election bet after public endorsement

American streamer and social media influencer Adin Ross scored...