To gain the full productivity benefits of generative AI and other technologies, Europe and the United States will need to focus both on improving human capital and accelerating technology adoption.

At a glance

Amid tightening labor markets and a slowdown in productivity growth, Europe and the United States face shifts in labor demand, spurred by AI and automation. Our updated modeling of the future of work finds that demand for workers in STEM-related, healthcare, and other high-skill professions would rise, while demand for occupations such as office workers, production workers, and customer service representatives would decline. By 2030, in a midpoint adoption scenario, up to 30 percent of current hours worked could be automated, accelerated by generative AI (gen AI). Efforts to achieve net-zero emissions, an aging workforce, and growth in e-commerce, as well as infrastructure and technology spending and overall economic growth, could also shift employment demand.
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Thanks for sharing! I think the difficult thing about tomorrow’s workplace is that we must leverage the affordances Gen AI provides us, yet put a unique spin on it so that our work is distinctive and stands out from the run-of-the-mill stuff
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21 sats \ 4 replies \ @Lux 1 Jun
human capital, tststs..
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I know what human capital is, but what do you mean? Can you explain it better?
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21 sats \ 2 replies \ @Lux 1 Jun
do you? do you consider your family members capital? like things, or livestock? nothing against you, just making you think
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I put this up. #559118, even im blown away by the video.
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thinking ...
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If this is true, formation is indispensable in the long run, but hey, this is inevitable that it will happen in reality.
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