DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Google DeepMind economist sees no AI jobs bloodbath yet, but warns of a layoff cascade

June 10, 2026
in News
Google DeepMind economist sees no AI jobs bloodbath yet, but warns of a layoff cascade
An office lobby with a Google DeepMind sign in dark gray.
A Google DeepMind economist talked about AI’s impact on jobs. Bloomberg/Getty Images
  • Alex Imas, a Google DeepMind economist, said there’s little evidence of broad AI-driven job cuts.
  • But he warned AI panic could trigger a “cascade effect” of layoffs.
  • It comes as executives face pressure to show they’re adapting to AI.

Alex Imas hasn’t yet seen evidence that AI is driving job losses.

During an interview with the “Dwarkesh Podcast,” the director of AGI economics at Google DeepMind and a professor of economics at the University of Chicago was asked if he’s seen any evidence of a white-collar jobs apocalypse. He said no.

Still, he warned of a hypothetical scenario that could trigger a “cascade effect” of FOMO-driven job cuts.

“Let’s say we get into a narrative where if you’re a firm and you’re not laying people off, then you’re seen as not adapting AI enough,” he said. “That’s super worrying, where the firm might actually be worse off after the layoffs than before the layoffs, but it’s just doing the layoffs to have the perception that, ‘Look, we’re not behind the times. We’re using AI.'”

A Google DeepMind spokesperson said Imas appeared on the podcast in a personal capacity and reiterated that the scenario he discussed was hypothetical. The spokesperson said Imas’ broader point was that current data does not show evidence of a white-collar bloodbath.

The spokesperson also pointed to previous comments from Google DeepMind’s CEO, Demis Hassabis, who has said AI could make workers more productive and create new jobs.

Imas’ comments come as executives across industries are under pressure to show investors and employees that they are adapting to AI. Some companies — like Jack Dorsey’s Block and Snap, the maker of Snapchat — cited AI when announcing workforce cuts. Meanwhile, leading AI voices, including Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, have warned that the technology could eliminate large swaths of entry-level white-collar work.

Imas said he hasn’t seen evidence of broad AI-driven job losses.

“A lot of people are looking at it,” he said, adding that “even looking at software engineering, the most exposed sectors, there’s just not really anything going on.”

Instead, he said AI could still make some jobs more productive by automating parts of a role, letting workers focus on tasks machines cannot do.

“Let’s say the AI automates nine out of ten tasks. One task is not automated,” he said. “If that person can now focus in on that task, the job will become more productive.”

For now, Imas said, the broader jobs apocalypse has not arrived.

“Right now, we don’t really have any evidence of a white-collar bloodbath,” he said.

Imas did not provide additional comment to Business Insider.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Google DeepMind economist sees no AI jobs bloodbath yet, but warns of a layoff cascade appeared first on Business Insider.

From the Trump administration to Kevin O’Leary, there’s a new narrative that China is to blame for plummeting data center popularity
News

From the Trump administration to Kevin O’Leary, there’s a new narrative that China is to blame for plummeting data center popularity

by Fortune
June 10, 2026

As negative sentiment toward data center construction reaches a fever pitch, some AI advocates are blaming China for emerging narratives ...

Read more
News

I saw a futuristic electric air taxi that costs $28 an hour to fly. Meet the Alia 250.

June 10, 2026
News

‘Godfather of AI’ Geoffrey Hinton says the war in Ukraine changed his view of military AI

June 10, 2026
News

Multiple attackers kill 12 people and wound 9 in a late-night mass shooting in Johannesburg

June 10, 2026
News

Saudi economy redraws ambitions—‘going local’ is the new buzz phrase 

June 10, 2026
Google DeepMind economist sees no AI jobs bloodbath yet, but warns of a layoff cascade

Google DeepMind economist sees no AI jobs bloodbath yet, but warns of a layoff cascade

June 10, 2026
A $7 billion horse race: Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley battle for ‘lead left’ position ahead of OpenAI and Anthropic IPOs

A $7 billion horse race: Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley battle for ‘lead left’ position ahead of OpenAI and Anthropic IPOs

June 10, 2026
Burning cross found in Chicago park sparks police investigation into how it got there

Burning cross found in Chicago park sparks police investigation into how it got there

June 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026