يحاول ذهب - حر

Artificial intelligence does not destroy jobs—CEOs do

December 26, 2025

|

Mint Ahmedabad

Every major technological shift triggers the same fear: this time, jobs will disappear for good.

- RAVI VENKATESAN

We heard it with mechanization, computers, the internet—and now with artificial intelligence (AI). But history is clear. Technology itself does not determine outcomes. People with power do. Leadership does. Guns don't kill people; people do. AI doesn’t destroy jobs; CEOs do.

Right now, far too many leaders are using AI in the most crude and unimaginative way possible—as a chainsaw to cut costs, automate roles and discard people. Layoffs are announced as “efficiency gains.” Stock prices jump. Executives congratulate themselves for being “AI-first.”

And then the real costs begin to surface. Consider cases like Klarna, which publicly celebrated replacing thousands of customer service roles with AI, only to later acknowledge that customer experience had suffered and human support had to be rebuilt. This is becoming a familiar pattern: automate aggressively, hollow out capability and then, as problems surface, quietly reverse course. This is not strategic leadership. It is short-term cost engineering and opportunism masquerading as innovation. Used carelessly, AI will trigger two crises at once.

The first is within organizations. When employees see AI deployed primarily as a job-destruction tool, trust collapses. Fear replaces initiative. Creativity gives way to compliance. The very people companies will need most—adaptable, committed, high-judgment talent—either disengage or leave.

المزيد من القصص من Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad

Wake up: Indian women aren’t in search of Western approval

The West’s discovery of Indian beauty reflects colonial attitudes

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Venezuela’s oil shake-up could go either way for India

The unfolding crisis in Venezuela draws into sharp relief a less-recognized feature of the modern global economy: the movement of expectations often matters more than that of physical goods.

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

INDIA'S NEW CARRIERS' TROUBLED FLIGHT PATH

An investigation into 3 airline hopefuls reveals a trail of compliance issues, court convictions and capital shortfall

time to read

5 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad

Amagi cuts IPO size to widen investor base

Cloud-based broadcast and streaming technology firm Amagi has downsized its initial public offering (IPO), trimming the fresh equity raise to ₹816 crore from ₹1,020 crore as it sharpens its focus on attracting a broader and more stable institutional investor base amid improving profitability.

time to read

2 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad

India, Cambodia discuss cybercriminals operating in Indochina

Amid concerns over the rising trend of cybercriminals functioning from cyber slavery farms operational in Indochina countries, officials of India and Cambodia held a meeting on “areas of future cooperation and mutual interest” on the issue.

time to read

1 min

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Rupee bites: Your overseas education just got costlier

A weakening rupee is rewriting the economics of studying abroad compared to five years ago

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Global bond sales hit record $245 bn at 2026's start

Global bond sales had their busiest ever start to a year as borrowers of every stripe seize on investors’ insatiable appetite for risk.

time to read

1 min

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Trump nod to tariff bill targeting India

US President Donald Trump has “greenlit” a sanctions bill that could impose 500% tariffs on countries buying Russian oil, giving him “tremendous leverage” against countries like China and India to stop them from purchasing cheap oil from Moscow.

time to read

2 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

BMW’s 25-model offensive to expand luxury base in India

BMW AG is preparing its biggest product offensive in India with 25 new models in 2026, mostly targeting first-time premium buyers, as the German automaker looks to tap into India’s growing ranks of the affluent class.

time to read

2 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad

Chasing Northern Lights in chilly Yukon

In Canada's western most territory, winter is an invitation to move at an unhurried pace and commune with white expanses

time to read

4 mins

January 09, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size