
AI is already impacting the labor market, starting with young tech workers, Goldman economist says
Most companies have yet to deploy artificial intelligence in production cases, meaning that the overall job market hasn't yet been significantly impacted by AI, said Joseph Briggs, senior global economist of Goldman's research division, in a podcast episode shared first with CNBC.
But there are already signs of a hiring pullback in the technology sector, hitting younger employees there the hardest, Briggs said.
"If you look at the tech sector's employment trends, they've been basically growing as a share of overall employment in a remarkably linear manner for the last 20 years," Briggs said on the episode of "Goldman Sachs Exchanges" to be aired Tuesday. "Over the last three years, we've actually seen a pullback in tech hiring that has led it to undershoot its trend."
Since its November 2022 release, OpenAI's ChatGPT has fueled the rise of the world's most valuable company, Nvidia, and forced entire industries to contend with its implications. Generative AI models are quickly becoming adept at handling many routine tasks, and some experts say they are already on par with human software engineers, for instance.
That has sparked concerns that while automation will make companies more productive and enrich shareholders, swaths of the job market could be impacted in the coming years.
Technology executives have recently become more candid about the impact of AI on employees. Companies including Alphabet and Microsoft have said AI is producing roughly 30% of the code on some projects, and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said in June that AI handles as much as 50% of the work at his company.
Young tech workers, whose jobs are the easiest to automate, are the first concrete signs of displacement, according to Briggs. Unemployment rates among tech workers between 20 and 30 years old jumped by 3 percentage points since the start of this year, he said.
Briggs recently co-authored a report titled "Quantifying the Risks of AI-Related Job Displacement" that cites labor market data from IPUMS and Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research.
"This is a much larger increase than we've seen in the tech sector more broadly [and] a larger increase than we've seen for other young workers," he said.
The approach from technology CEOs has been to hold off on hiring of junior employees as they begin to deploy AI, said George Lee, the former technology banker who co-heads the Goldman Sachs Global Institute.
"How do I begin to streamline my enterprise so I can be more flexible and more adaptive... yet without harming our competitive edge?" Lee said in the podcast episode. "Young employees for this period of time are a little bit the casualty of that."
Over time, roughly 6% to 7% of all workers could lose their jobs because of automation from AI in a baseline scenario, according to Briggs.
The transition could be more painful, both to workers and the broader U.S. economy, if adoption among companies happens faster than the roughly decade-long period he assumes, Briggs said.
That could either be because of advances in the technology or an economic slowdown that encourages companies to cut costs, he said.
If AI researchers achieve AGI, or artificial general intelligence that equals a person's ability to learn and adapt across domains, instead of being narrowly deployed, the impact on workers would probably be deeper.
"Our analysis doesn't factor in the potential for the emergence of AGI," Briggs said. "It's hard to even start thinking about the impact on the labor market, but I would guess there probably and undoubtedly is more room for labor substitution and a more disruptive impact in that world."

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