AI Found to Increasingly Replace Young Entry-Level Workers, Stanford Research Shows

5Mind. The Meme Platform

Experienced employees with tacit knowledge stand a better chance to hang on to their jobs.

Early-career workers, aged 22-25, face a disproportionate threat to job loss from the widespread adoption of generative artificial intelligence (AI), according to a recent research paper from Stanford University.

These workers, in most AI-exposed occupations, have experienced a 13 percent relative decline in employment, said the authors of the research published online on Aug. 26.

“In contrast, employment for workers in less exposed fields and more experienced workers in the same occupations has remained stable or continued to grow.”

The team of researchers—Erik Brynjolfsson, Senior Fellow at Stanford, Bharat Chandar, a postdoctoral researcher, and Ruyu Chen, a research scientist—used data collected from ADP, the largest payroll software provider in the United States.

They found that employment declines in the American labor market are mostly happening in occupations susceptible to AI automation, and not as much in environments where human labor is augmented.

Software developers and customer service representatives were some of the most disrupted work environments following the significant proliferation of AI deployment, according to the researchers. Meanwhile, work for more experienced employees in the same sectors continued to grow.

Employment trends for “workers of all ages in less-exposed occupations such as nursing aides have remained stable,” said the paper.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman made similar observations during a discussion at the Federal Reserve Conference last month.

When asked which areas could see a significant amount of job losses due to AI, Altman said, “Some areas … are totally gone,” a reference to AI service bots replacing customer support human agents.

Altman further talked about the diagnostic capabilities of ChatGPT, but said he would not entrust it with his medical treatment without having a human doctor in the loop. This occupation class will continue to remain, even with AI.

Not All Jobs or Workers

Regarding computer programmers, Altman said they were 10 times more productive compared to before, with salaries rising in Silicon Valley. He did not address any specific categories of programmers.

“Things in the physical world will keep being done by humans for a while, but when this robotics wave comes crashing in, in another three to seven years, I think that’ll be a really big thing for society to reckon with,” said Altman.

By Naveen Athrappully

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

New Book Warns Failure of Congress to Defend Separation of Powers Fuels Rise of Authoritarianism

The Book Congress: An Irrelevant Institution or Guardian of the Republic argues that Congress's decline threatens the Constitution’s separation of powers.

What Happens to State Sovereignty When Federal Money Stops?

What happens to state sovereignty when the federal government can no longer afford to subsidize 36% of state budgets, on average?

Japanese Nationalists vs. the Replacement Migration Machine

Japan has begun to falter in its resolute refusal to embrace the mass migration regime that international governments and NGOs had demanded it do.

CIA is On Tucker Carlson for Talking to Iran

“They read my text messages” and the Central Intelligence Agency is trying to “frame me as a foreign agent,” alleged Tucker Carlson.

The EU Poses A Much More Credible Threat To Russia Than The Inverse

Unlike back in June 1941, Russia is now a nuclear superpower, and that might be the only factor that deters the EU from invading Russia.

Virginia Democrats Pass Sweeping Agenda in First Trifecta Session but Adjourn Without a Budget

Virginia Democrats ended their first trifecta session, passing bills raising the minimum wage, banning assault firearms, limiting ICE cooperation, and expanding paid leave.

Judge Blocks RFK Jr.’s Appointees to Vaccine Panel

A federal judge in Massachusetts ruled that Health Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. illegally appointed 13 new members to an influential vaccine panel.

US Coast Guard Intercepts Semi-Submersible in Pacific Carrying 17,600 Pounds of Cocaine

17,600 pounds of cocaine were seized from a smuggling vessel—enough to produce more than 6 million potentially lethal doses, officials said.

MAHA Movement Emphasizes Shift Away From Glyphosate to Regenerative Farming, Eating Real Food

Weeks after Trump’s glyphosate executive order, many MAHA proponents believe that awareness about chemicals and regenerative farming is on the rise.

Trump Puts China Visit on Hold Amid Iran War

As the Iran war continues, President Donald Trump said he would delay his long-awaited trip to Beijing, originally set for the end of this month.

White House Outlines Vision for Underground Visitor Screening Facility

The 33,000-square-foot facility proposed beneath Sherman Park would process visitors entering the White House and could open by mid-2028 if approved.

Trump Signs Order Assigning Vance to Head Anti-Fraud Task Force

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on March 16, officially creating an anti-fraud task force headed by Vice President JD Vance.

US Opens New Trade Probes Targeting 60 Countries Over Alleged Forced Labor Practices

The U.S. has launched trade probes into 60 economies to investigate whether their trade practices allow imports produced with forced labor.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central