The AI Revolution in Labor: Navigating Job Transformation, Economic Impacts, and Skill Evolution 

Authors

  • Ghazi I. Al-Assaf Associate Professor of Economics, Associate Dean for Scientific Research Affairs, Joaan Bin Jassim Academy for Defence Studies, Doha, Qatar, & School of Business, The University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan. Author
  • Abdullah M. Al-Malki Associate Professor of Economics, Head of Economics Department, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33948/ESJ-KSU-17-3-5

Keywords:

Artificial Intelligence, Labor Markets, Job Transformation, Employment

Abstract

This research paper analyzes the applicability of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a transformative force across the world's labor market, job roles, and skill requirements across different economic sectors. We analyze how AI is changing not only employmentthe labor market and wages and income distribution. We find AI has, by nature, a dual purpose in the labor market. It causes unemployment in routine and low-skilled occupations, such as manufacturing and retail, but at the same time it creates high-skilled employment in IT-related fields. The economic effects of AI are similarly dual: an exacerbation of income inequality or the opening of new economic mobility pathways via expanded educational and skill-development opportunities. The impact of AI varies widely across sectors. The main discussion shows that while manufacturing has the highest risk of automation, healthcare and education face less job substitution than job augmentation. In addition, we locate an increasing need for technical AI skills on the one hand, and uniquely human capacities, including creativity and intelligence, on the other hand. We propose policy recommendations based on these insights, including ways to mitigate negative effects on lower-skilled workers. They are targeted at reskilling programs, education system reforms, and sector-specific transition strategies. Our work adds to the conversation about what the future of work might look like in an AI economy, and clarifies the pace at which we need to act to ensure that the rewards of AI are shared widely with society.

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Published

2025-12-05