City
Epaper

AI won't take as many jobs as expected: Study

By IANS | Updated: January 23, 2024 14:00 IST

San Francisco, Jan 23 While researchers around the world expect job losses due to artificial intelligence (AI) soon, ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Jan 23 While researchers around the world expect job losses due to artificial intelligence (AI) soon, a new study has said that AI might not take as many jobs as expected.

A recent study conducted by MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) investigated whether AI could perform tasks more efficiently than humans and whether it was cost-effective for businesses to replace human labour with AI.

The study took into consideration the broader implications of AI implementation in the labour market.

The researchers found computer vision AI can currently automate tasks that makeup 1.6 per cent of worker wages in the US economy, excluding agriculture.

However, only 23 per cent of those wages, equivalent to 0.4 per cent of the entire economy, would be cheaper for companies to automate instead of hiring human workers at current costs.

"We find that at today’s costs US businesses would choose not to automate most vision tasks that have “AI Exposure,” and that only 23 per cent of worker wages being paid for vision tasks would be attractive to automate," the authors said.

"Overall, our findings suggest that AI job displacement will be substantial, but also gradual -- and therefore there is room for (government) policy and retraining to mitigate unemployment impacts," they added.

The study included examples of "vision tasks" that AI could achieve including analysing images from hospital diagnostic equipment or examining trays to ensure they contain the correct items.

Researchers surveyed employees to determine the share of their tasks that could be accomplished by computer vision. They subsequently developed models to assess cost-effectiveness.

They discovered that using AI visual detection to replace workers would rarely be worthwhile.

"We find that the median employee works in a firm where close to none of the vision tasks are cost-effective to automate. Even a firm with 5,000 employees, i.e., larger than 99.9 per cent of firms in the US, could only cost-effectively automate less than one-tenth of their existing vision labour at the current cost structure," the researchers stated.

The study acknowledged that the cost of AI will decrease over time, but the authors don't think it will do so as quickly as some have suggested. They also predicted that it would take some time for AI to have a major impact on these kinds of professions.

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

NationalThree BJP leaders' son inducted in RCA as party MLA Jaideep Bihani removed from convenor post

NationalPM Narendra Modi Interacts With Astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla, First Indian Aboard the International Space Station

NationalEfforts on to form govt in Manipur at the earliest: Former CM

NationalAirport security in India: CISF’s new vision for safer, smoother passenger experience

EntertainmentShefali Jariwala death: Security guard recalls last sighting before sudden death

Business Realted Stories

BusinessCentre to strengthen mining infrastructure in North East states: Kishan Reddy

BusinessBarefoot with the faithful: Gautam Adani's journey from industry captain to inner calling at Puri Rath Yatra

BusinessUS Senate reduces remittance tax to 1 pc from 3.5 pc in relief for NRIs

BusinessBarco and Prasad Unveil India’s First HDR Projection Color Grading Facility

BusinessGautam Adani’s visit to Puri beach a moment of pride, say lifeguards