A CNN article today caught my attention.
The chief executive of one of the world’s leading AI labs has warned that artificial intelligence could soon lead to a significant spike in unemployment—far sooner than expected. He argues that policymakers and corporate leaders are unprepared for the impact.
What is happening at BNY is just the tip of the iceberg. Whether for better or worse, Eliza is steadily replacing traditional research functions, and tools like Copilot are accelerating code development—look at the results in automating test case creation and code coverage processes.
Looking ahead, the ability to reverse-engineer requirements from existing code and use AI-driven content analysis to generate updated codebases with built-in test cases is not just theoretical; it’s an imminent reality. Modernization is rapidly moving toward automation, where business users will act primarily as validators rather than active contributors.
This transformation won’t happen overnight, but its trajectory is clear. While discussions often focus on its impact on the U.S. workforce, the effects will be even more profound in regions like India, where thousands of jobs involve repetitive tasks that AI tools can now fully automate.
If we fail to explore new areas of innovation—where, frankly, we have struggled to succeed—the company’s workforce will continue to shrink. Consider Wove as an example: despite years of development and significant high priced recruitment and investment, it has yet to produce anything truly transformative. Yet, our entire Wealth Management division is relying on it.
The question is: will we adapt and innovate in time, or simply watch as AI reshapes the industry around us?
Just like Industrialization caused massive shift this AI is going to cause huge unemployment in white collar profession. Once the programmers felt irreplaceable now Copilot can do majority of their work. Nadella says (as per the article) that 30% of MSFT code is written by AI.
That is SCARY.
RV is betting on that happening and running the firm with may be 1/3 of current strength .. That is the future