Ask ChatGPT whether layoffs at Big Tech companies are a preview of what’s coming for everyone else, and its answer is as clear as mud: Not yet. But the warning signs are real.
Companies outside the tech sector are using artificial intelligence for a growing list of tasks, from reading legal documents, to creating marketing materials, and even conducting job interviews. Whether that’s enhancing or replacing human work is a question our economists and portfolio managers are grappling with.
For many of them, AI is seen more as a long-term job creator than a job destroyer. “I have no doubt that AI is going to dramatically transform our lives and eventually touch most of the economy,” says Chris Buchbinder, portfolio manager for CGVV — Capital Group U.S. Large Value ETF. “Some have argued this is going to lead to large-scale white-collar job loss, and those concerns reflect real anxiety for many workers. But I believe that is far too pessimistic, and that is not my view. It’s also not consistent with the history of productivity enhancing technology.”
Instead, AI is likely to drive faster economic growth and a surge of new businesses. “As a telecom analyst in the late 1990s, I saw the internet create all kinds of new companies and jobs. It was unimaginable that Amazon would become a retail giant, Netflix would overtake much of the media industry, or online advertising would surpass traditional channels,” Buchbinder explains. “We’re at that same stage now. The next generation of AI companies and use cases will be just as hard to predict and just as transformative.”