Tech could create a “useless” class of workers

That’s the stark warning from Piyush Gupta – the CEO of banking giant DBS

Tech could create a “useless” class of workers

Artificial intelligence and automation have the potential to create a useless class of workers, according to DBS Group Holdings Chief Piyush Gupta as reported by The Straits Times.

These seismic shifts are resulting in mounting uncertainty about the future. “That's the cry of anger, concern and alarm that we're hearing," he said.

“The impact of technology is vastly underestimated,” he said, pointing out that advances will mean fewer jobs for who previously belonged to the working class.

“We are hurtling down a path of creating a “useless class,” he said, because there will be fewer traditional jobs as we know it.

The rise of “Big Tech” – big technology companies – is also bound to result in the concentration of resources, wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands.

Gupta said that instead of large corporations employing many workers, he expected a movement back towards small-scale enterprises driven by entrepreneurship and self-sustaining employment.

Even in his own organization, Gupta said, jobs are already shrinking dues to technological displacement. “Convenience and functionality will improve for consumers but it will not be through job creation,” he said.

But World Bank group managing director and chief financial officer Joaquim Levy is less certain about technology’s effects on the labour force. The impact of technology can be difficult to predict, he said.

Levy cited a previous expectation that bank tellers would be rendered irrelevant when automated teller machines were invented. Instead, he said, their roles have changed.

"The types of jobs will change but this doesn't mean finance will shrink," he said.

 

 

Recent articles & video

Can a worker be employed by two companies for the same services?

Singapore's workforce ready for upcoming changes from AI: survey

Toshiba to lay off 5,000 employees in Japan: reports

Mercado Libre to hire about 18,000 people: reports

Most Read Articles

Singapore employers mandated to consider requests for flexi-work

Novartis to cut over 600 jobs amid global restructuring

Singapore hikes qualifying salaries amid foreign-local talent competition: report