Essayer OR - Gratuit
Artificial intelligence does not destroy jobs—CEOs do
Mint Kolkata
|December 26, 2025
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.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 26, 2025 de Mint Kolkata.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint Kolkata
Mint Kolkata
HOW INDIAN ADVERTISING CAN BECOME CASTE-CONSCIOUS
I spent years in Silicon Valley through the post-George Floyd surge in DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) efforts, and then witnessed its very public retreat earlier this year.
3 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
WHY THE NEW NPS RULES MAKE SENSE IN THE REAL WORLD
There was a time, not so long ago, when the Income Tax Act specified that of the sum you could invest under Section 80C, only Rs 10,000 could be put in tax-saving mutual funds.
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Parliament sharpens oversight on PSUs
Parliament will significantly widen its scrutiny of central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) through the Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU) at a time the government is ramping up operations in strategic sectors such as nuclear energy and rare earths and opens sunrise sectors to greater private investments, said COPU chairperson Baijayant Panda in an interview.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Govt looks to ease funding blues for private e-bus fleets
Private sector's e-bus financing may be routed through Sidbi, Nabard as lenders remain wary
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Jaishankar begins France visit
External affairs minister S. Jaishankar on Sunday began a six-day visit to France and Luxembourg to hold talks on bilateral and global issues of mutual interest.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Steel cos get duty boost amid glut
Problem of plenty
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Govt probe into raw plastic imports
India has initiated an anti-dumping probe into imports of nylon-6 chips and granules—raw plastic materials—from China and Russia, after domestic manufacturers alleged that cheap imports are hurting local industry, the commerce ministry said on Saturday.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Gig work: This model is fine but must pay more
An online debate sparked by a gig delivery strike yielded more heat than light. Gig platforms aren't a problem but could ease one if they increase wages and adhere to India's labour codes
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Inside the 48-hour Grok crisis that put X in MeitY’s crosshairs
example: if billionaire Elon Musk appeared in a photograph alongside other technology executives and users prompted the tool to remove “the most racist person\", Grok might remove Musk, this person said.
3 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Let us pause to reflect on all that’s good about our world
As this is my first column of the new year, I thought I would do something challenging—write what is good about the modern world.
4 mins
January 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
