試す 金 - 無料
Artificial intelligence does not destroy jobs—CEOs do
Mint Chennai
|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.
このストーリーは、Mint Chennai の December 26, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Mint Chennai からのその他のストーリー
Mint Chennai
Can my will provide for my pet's future care and maintenance?
Given my bonding with my pet, how can I provide for its care and maintenance through my will?
1 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
UBS sees rupee at 94/$ in FY27 even as trade woes ease
The rupee is expected to continue its long-term depreciation, reaching 94 against the dollar in FY27, as structural headwinds outweigh temporary relief from easing trade tensions, according to UBS Investment Bank.
1 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Edtech makes micro-learning pivot as dealmaking declines
The bet is on short, vernacular micro-learning to capture low-intent, high-frequency users
2 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Wipro adds office space at Mumbai's Airoli hub
Information technology (IT) major Wipro has increased its presence in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, leasing 145,157 sq. ft of office space for five years at Mindspace Business Parks in Navi Mumbai's Airoli East.
1 min
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Domestic steelmakers raise prices after safeguard duty
Steel price increases are expected to support the profitability of Indian steelmakers
2 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Why cloud storage is moving back home
As web storage gets pricier, users are looking for alternatives like private cloud devices that promise ownership, privacy, and savings
5 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Devyani-Sapphire merger is a good fit, but not a demand fix
The proposed merger of Devyani International Ltd and Sapphire Foods Ltd appears strategically sound.
1 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Adani bond issue sees heavy demand
Adani Enterprises had planned to raise ₹1,000 cr via sale of two-, three- and five-year bonds.
1 min
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Bollywood partners Hollywood for reach
Hollywood’s relationship with Bollywood is evolving.
1 mins
January 07, 2026
Mint Chennai
Trump’s hint to oil executives weeks before Maduro ouster: ‘Get ready’
The U.S. president now wants oil companies to grow Venezuela's production
4 mins
January 07, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
