AI will create long-term ‘job disruptions,’ CEO of Big Four firm says
KPMG survey finds 58% of consumers say generative AI has significant impact on their professional lives
With U.S. consumers and executives both expressing worries about the impact of artificial intelligence (A.I.) in the workplace, the CEO of one of America’s largest consulting firms warned about "long-term" disruption.
"I think in the long term, there will be job disruption, no doubt about it, KPMG CEO Paul Knopp told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo, Tuesday, from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
"Seventy-six percent of millennials and Gen Z said their jobs are already significantly impacted by generative AI, and there has not been significant job loss to date," he continued. "So what I think that means is that we are putting it into the mainstream now, and the workforce is still very flexible today."
I.M.F. WARNS A.I. WILL IMPACT 60% OF U.S. JOBS, INCREASE INEQUALITY WORLDWIDE
Additional KPMG findings show 65% of business executives believe generative AI will have a high impact on their organization in the next three to five years


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"That same study said that these individuals [who] took the survey, that they weren't that worried about job disruption, they thought that their mental health would actually improve," he added, "meaning that more mundane tasks might be automated, allowing them to do more valuable things in their work."
Also chiming in on the "Mornings with Maria" conversation in Davos, International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva raised labor concerns that jobs may "disappear" with the rise of A.I.
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A recent report from her firm estimated that 60% of global jobs may soon be impacted by A.I.
"The report is a wake-up call. Because it says, over the next years, it’s not going to happen tomorrow, but… there will be a tsunami affecting us. And, we still have a chance to not be hit by it, but rather to ride on it for opportunities for higher growth."
By "impact" on human jobs, they mean to say AI will take those jobs. After AI reaches a sufficient level of self-teaching, it won't even need the programmers who developed it. Once this genie is out of the bottle, there will be no putting it back in. If you want to know what happens next, rewatch the first Matrix movie.
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