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Is AI Really Coming After Your Job?
A Stanford study found employment among Gen Z workers dropped 13% since 2022 in jobs most exposed to AI, while senior roles remain largely unaffected.
- Public concern is high; an August 2025 poll found 71% worried, and a September 2025 report showed nearly a quarter of 18 to 34-year-olds fear job loss within two years.
- Despite rising adoption, a Yale Budget Lab report found that workers haven't shifted jobs, new roles haven't emerged at scale, and automation hasn't displaced employees.
- Specific occupations show high exposure, including fast food and counter workers , customer service representatives , and software developers , while the Harvard University Sept. 8 study found junior employees face hiring declines at AI-using firms.
- Younger workers are already seeing losses: Gen Z workers in exposed jobs faced a 13% employment decline since 2022, though most jobs remain intact for now.
- Data gaps make long-term forecasting hard, as researchers measuring AI exposure find incomplete data complicates forecasts while workplaces adopting AI suggest ongoing change.
Insights by Ground AI
59 Articles
59 Articles
Coverage Details
Total News Sources59
Leaning Left8Leaning Right5Center22Last UpdatedBias Distribution63%  Center
Bias Distribution
- 63% of the sources are Center
63% Center
L 23%
C 63%
14%
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