Print settings
In your phone's print dialog:
Riverside Herald

IMF, ILO, OECD, McKinsey, WEF, and U.S. labor data agree AI will shake up tasks and occupations; whether workers feel replaced or empowered depends on how fast
RIVERSIDE — Ask executives, economists, or union leaders whether artificial intelligence is “the future” of work, and the answers quickly splinter. Some describe copilots and automation as inevitable substitutes for human hours; others insist the same tools will mainly make specialists faster and safer. What systematic reviews from international bodies, consultant macro researchers, and U.S. statistical agencies suggest is less cinematic: wide exposure of tasks to automation…