As AI eats entry-level jobs, uncertainty fills the gap
As AI eats entry-level jobs, uncertainty fills the gap
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Sharon Goldman is an AI
Welcome to Eye on AI! In this edition...entry-level job loss due to AI breeds uncertaintyâŠOpenAI acquires Statsig for $1.1 billion â and one of its top executives changes rolesâŠFrench AI startup Mistral is reportedly finalizing new funding round at $14 billion valuationâŠis Amazon getting into the AI agent game?
Life has always been uncertain, but for generations, young college grads could count on one thing: an entry-level job. It wasnât glamorousâmaybe you fetched coffee, made photocopies, or slogged through low-level tasks for little payâbut it gave you a foothold, the first rung of whatever ladder you hoped to climb.
Now there are signs that, in some industries, that âsure thingâ is slipping away. A new paper from Stanford Universityâs Digital Economy Lab drew wide attention last week: it found that since late 2022, early-career workers aged 22 to 25 in jobs most exposed to AI automationâlike software development and customer serviceâhave seen steep relative declines in employment. The researchers tested other possible explanations, from pandemic-related education setbacks to economy-wide factors like rising interest rates, but concluded that the rise of generative AI was the most likely driver, while noting more data is needed to prove a direct causal link.
There is also a new Harvard study which also found that the release of ChatGPT in November 2022 marked a turning point in the labor market From 2015 through mid-2022, hiring was on the rise for both junior and senior roles. But beginning in 2022, entry-level employment stalled and then slipped into decline. According to the study, headcount for early-career roles at AI-adopting firms has fallen 7.7% over six quarters since early 2023. The study also found that senior
A third study, carried out
As my colleague Jeremy Kahn said in Tuesdayâs Eye on AI, none of these studies disentangle the effects of AI from the possible effects of the unwinding of the tech hiring boom that took place during the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, he explained, âmany large companies bulked up their software development and IT departments. Major tech firms such as Google, Meta, and Microsoft hired tens of thousands of new employees, sometimes hiring people before there was even any work for them to do just in order to prevent rivals from snapping up the same coders. Then, when the pandemic ended and it was clear that some ideas, such as Metaâs pivot to the metaverse, were not going to pan out, these same companies laid off tens of thousands of workers.âÂ
Whatever the reasons, the prospect of post-college unemployment is an uncomfortable place to beâespecially for students who thought they could count on steady pipelines into fields like IT or consulting. PwC, for instance, says it plans to recruit a third fewer grads
Some may tell young people to pivot, persist, or simply pray. But we canât afford complacency. Society will need these workers one way or another, and that means building real pathways into todayâs jobsâand tomorrowâs. Whatâs happening on the ground to guarantee young people are both prepared forâand included inâthe future of work? Opportunity has to exist, even in the face of uncertainty.
With that, hereâs the rest of the AI news.
Sharon Goldmansharon.goldman.com
The Google antitrust ruling gives its AI rivals one big reason to cheer â
Figma is getting crushed in its post-IPO earnings debut; CEO Dylan Field is focused on AIâs long term power to âraise the ceilingâ â
Is an âAI winterâ coming? Hereâs what investors and leaders can learn from past AI slumps â
The new thing on campus: Why universities are appointing their first chief AI officers â
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OpenAI acquires Statsig for $1.1 billion â plus executive moves. OpenAI has snapped up product development startup Statsig in a $1.1 billion deal, according to CNBCâthe latest move in its acquisition streak following the purchase of Jony Iveâs hardware venture, io. As part of the deal, Statsig CEO Vijaye Raji will join OpenAI as chief technologist for its applications unit, reporting to Fidji Simo, the former Instacart CEO appointed in May to lead OpenAIâs applications business. In addition, OpenAIâs chief product officer, Kevin Weil, announced in a post on LinkedIn that he will become VP of a new group called OpenAI for Science, âto build the next great scientific instrument: an AI-powered platform that accelerates scientific discovery.â Weil said he will work closely with Sebastien Bubeck, an OpenAI researcher and the former VP of AI and Distinguished Scientist at Microsoft.
French AI startup Mistral reportedly finalizing new funding round at $14 billion valuation. Bloomberg reported that Mistral, the French AI startup founded
Is Amazon getting into the AI agent game? Amazon, which far better known for its AWS cloud computing division than for big moves in enterprise software, is testing new agentic, AI-powered workspace software called Quick Suite, according to internal documents viewed
Sept. 8-10: Fortune Brainstorm Tech, Park City, Utah. Apply to attend here.
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Oct. 21-22: TedAI San Francisco. Apply to attend here.
Dec. 2-7:Â NeurIPS, San Diego
Dec. 8-9: Fortune Brainstorm AI San Francisco. Apply to attend here.
Thatâs the share of workers who say theyâre comfortable with AI acting as their boss, according to recent research from enterprise software company Workday.
While 75% of employees say theyâre fine teaming up with AI agents, only 30% draw the line at being managed
"We're entering a new era of work where AI can be an incredible partner, and a complement to human judgement, leadership, and empathy," said Kathy Pham, vice president of AI at Workday. "Building trust means being intentional in how AI is used and keeping people at the center of every decision."
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