City
Epaper

A tsunami is hitting labour market with AI, we must invest in skills: IMF chief

By IANS | Updated: January 21, 2026 10:05 IST

Davos, Jan 21 A tsunami is hitting the labour market and jobs are being both enhanced and replaced ...

Open in App

Davos, Jan 21 A tsunami is hitting the labour market and jobs are being both enhanced and replaced by artificial intelligence (AI), Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF), has said.

Speaking at a session during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, she said the world as a whole is already experiencing the arrival of AI, but “I do worry about the accordion of opportunities that are much more present in some places than in others”.

"AI is quickly reshaping economies. Some roles grow; others disappear. We must invest in skills and prepare communities," she stressed.

AI is boosting productivity in translation and interpretation and for research analysts, it is enhancement, not replacement. But she worried about communities where AI is not present.

The IMF calculates that on average, 40 per cent of jobs are touched by AI either enhanced or scrapped or changed quite significantly without implications for better pay. In advanced economies, this is 60 per cent, but in low-income countries, 20 to 26 per cent, she said.

“We have a fairly big range of impact on global growth from 0.1 to 0.8 per cent”. A 0.8 per cent boost of productivity would make growth higher than pre-pandemic, Georgieva told the gathering.

At the session, Ashwini Vaishnaw, Minister of Electronics and Information Technology, said that creating a large AI model doesn’t give you power as a country.

We have to understand the economics of what he calls the 5th Industrial Revolution.

“The economics of this revolution is going to come from ROI. ROI is going to come from deploying the lowest cost solution to get the highest possible return,” Vaishnaw said.

The race is on, said Khalid Al-Falih, Minister of Investment, Ministry of Investment of Saudi Arabia.

“Everybody wants to build the infrastructure for it, but the essence of AI's power is it has to be accessible. Diffusion is not just within economies that have to compete, but I believe it has to be done globally,” he mentioned.

Technology and AI is a key enabler for Saudi Arabia, said Al-Falih.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndia matters to world; we must be more careful, measured in our responses: Syed Akbaruddin

NationalIndia matters to world; we must be more careful, measured in our responses: Syed Akbaruddin

PoliticsHope opposition will also support Nari Shakti Adhiniyam: Union Minister Chirag Paswan

BusinessMistakes Travellers Make During IRCTC Ticket Booking and How to Avoid Them

Technology5 Best Video Watermark Removers in 2026: Which One Should You Use?

Business Realted Stories

BusinessRupee depreciation post Feb 27 in line with other currencies: Report

BusinessIndia’s First Global Cake Awards, IICMA 2026, Returns to New Delhi, Strengthening India’s Global Presence in Cake Artistry

BusinessNational Award for Dr. Paresh Makwana Puts Ahmedabad on India's Fertility Excellence Map

BusinessGovt moves to boost Induction Heater production amid West Asia tensions

BusinessSentiment on Indian IT sector turns bearish amid global uncertainties: Report