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History's major technological shifts—industrialization, electrification, the internet—each wiped out the careers of one to two generations. Those workers suffered while their grandchildren benefited. AI is likely to repeat this pattern, creating a generational chasm between those who lose and those who gain.

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While the economic disruption from COVID saw a relatively quick bounce-back in employment, the changes brought by AI will be permanent. Many job functions and industries will not recover, representing a fundamental, one-way shift in the economy rather than a temporary downturn.

Unlike previous technologies that augmented specific skills, AI could eventually outperform humans in all domains, including creative and emotional tasks. This suggests the historical pattern of technology creating more jobs than it destroys may not hold true.

While AI will eliminate jobs, it simultaneously creates the largest financial opportunity for the under-25 generation in history, bigger than the internet. It is a tidal wave that young, adaptable individuals are best positioned to ride, while older professionals may struggle to pivot.

Tech leaders cite Jevon's Paradox, suggesting AI efficiency will create more jobs. However, this historical model may not hold, as the speed of AI disruption outpaces society's ability to adapt, and demand for knowledge work isn't infinitely elastic.

AI's impact on labor will likely follow a deceptive curve: an initial boost in productivity as it augments human workers, followed by a crash as it masters their domains and replaces them entirely. This creates a false sense of security, delaying necessary policy responses.

While AI may not cause mass unemployment, its greatest danger lies in automating the routine entry-level tasks that new workers rely on to build skills. This could disrupt traditional career ladders and create a long-term talent development crisis for organizations.

Historically, technological advancements primarily displaced blue-collar workers first. The current AI revolution is unique because its most immediate and realized disruptions are targeting white-collar, knowledge-based roles, breaking a long-standing pattern of technological impact on the labor market.

While technology historically creates more jobs than it destroys, this transition period can last 40-80 years. The individuals whose skills become obsolete rarely live to see the long-term economic recovery, experiencing lifelong financial hardship while only their grandchildren reap the benefits.

Unlike gradual agricultural or industrial shifts, AI is displacing blue and white-collar jobs globally and simultaneously. This rapid, compressed timeframe leaves little room for adaptation, making societal unrest and violence highly probable without proactive planning.

The belief that Luddites were simply anti-progress is a historical misreading. Technology created long-term societal wealth but caused immediate, unrecoverable job loss for them. AI will accelerate this dynamic, creating widespread disruption faster than workers can adapt.

Past Tech Revolutions Show AI Will Likely "Crater" a Generation of Workers | RiffOn