يحاول ذهب - حر
Artificial intelligence does not destroy jobs—CEOs do
December 26, 2025
|Mint New Delhi
Every major technological shift triggers the same fear: this time, jobs will disappear for good.
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.
هذه القصة من طبعة December 26, 2025 من Mint New Delhi.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint New Delhi
Mint New Delhi
The names we carry
A nickname isn't just what someone calls you. It's how they see you, and how you learn to see yourself around them
2 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
A walk inside the archives of Tarun Tahiliani
The glass room, filled with swatches and garments, holds the key to the past, present and future of the 30-year-old brand
4 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Reliance Jio plans mega IPO with a 2.5% float
Reliance Jio Platforms is considering an initial public offering this year that would float 2.5% of the company, people familiar with the matter said, a move that could make it India’s largest-ever IPO worth over $4 billion.
1 min
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
US trade fears rattle markets; Nifty below 26,000
Domestic equities were shaken by the ‘Trump factor’ throughout the week, leaving India the worst-performing major market globally as risk-off sentiment gripped investors.
1 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
‘Dream is to be a one-stop shop for child and mother’
Alia Bhatt and Reliance Retail-backed Ed-A-Mamma has ventured into the kids and baby personal care category, with plans to tap other segments, such as teenage clothing and pet care, the actor-entrepreneur told *Mint* in an interview on Friday.
1 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Drawing on faith and supernatural forces
Amitav Ghosh's latest novel is a page turner, often veering into a realm of magical occurrences, but stretches the reader's beliefs a bit too far
5 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
A city festival displays the power of shared spaces
The 10-day BLR Hubba, which begins on 16 January, will have 250 events in more than 20 venues in Bengaluru
4 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Sebi for sweeping clean-up of margin and trading norms
Regulator proposes ₹5 crore net-worth for MTF brokers.
1 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
The world's best bear turns 100
In its centenary year, A.A. Milne's beloved teddy bear, Winnie the Pooh, can teach adults a lesson or two in humility
5 mins
January 10, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Federal Bank unveils Fortuna Wave to appeal to all young, mobile-first clients
Federal Bank's new brand identity, anchored by a refreshed logo called Fortuna Wave, comes at a moment when legacy banks are being forced to rethink how they appear, speak and scale—not because the old has failed, but because the audience has shifted.
3 mins
January 10, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
