C. Nagesh Bhushan Artificial intelligence and the future of work AI is not coming for the factory floor. It is coming for the corner office — and the social contract will need to catch up Hyderabad Apr 14th 2026 The most exposed workers today are not on the factory floor — they are at the desk with a graduate degree Something strange is happening to the conventional story about automation. For most of the past century, the received wisdom ran in one direction: machines replace muscles, not minds. The assembly-line worker was the perennial casualty; the knowledge professional was the safe harbour. A university degree, the argument went, was the best insurance policy against redundancy. That argument is now running in reverse. New data from Anthropic's Economic Index, synthesising observed real-world usage of large language models across professional settings, reveals that the occupations facing the highest actual automation today are not the blue-collar roles that ...
A new industrial policy Artificial intelligence is advancing at a pace that rivals the Industrial Revolution. Unlike past cycles, market forces alone cannot manage the concentration of wealth or the displacement of human roles. A proactive, people-first policy is needed to ensure superintelligence benefits society at large. The aim is shared prosperity, risk mitigation, and democratized access to AI tools. Modernising the tax base As value shifts from human labour to automated outputs, payroll taxes erode. To sustain social programmes, revenue must be rebalanced. Capital gains and corporate taxes should capture AI-driven profits, while levies on automated labour replace lost payroll contributions. Incentives must reward firms that retrain and retain workers, ensuring AI augments rather than replaces human agency. Public Wealth Fund A Public Wealth Fund would give every citizen a direct stake in AI growth. Seeded by government and frontier AI firms, it would invest in equity, ...