Understanding the future of work requires moving beyond speculative headlines about "robots taking over." To prepare for the Intelligence Age, we must distinguish between "lab-tested potential"—what Large Language Models (LLMs) are technically capable of—and "office-floor reality"—what they are actually doing in the economy today. 1. The Foundation: Theoretical vs. Observed Exposure The starting point for any labor economist is defining how much a job is "exposed" to technology. However, exposure is not a monolithic metric. There is a critical distinction between a system's theoretical capability and its actual integration into professional workflows. Theoretical Capability () Observed Exposure Definition: Measures if it is technically possible for an LLM to perform a specific task at least twice as fast as a human. Definition: Measures actual automated usage in professional settings by c...
1. Strategic Framework: The Ideological Infiltration of the British Establishment In the 1930s, Cambridge University served as the staging ground for an "ideological vogue" that provided the Soviet Union with a profound long-term asymmetric advantage. This was not merely a student rebellion but a systemic infiltration engineered by the NKVD, specifically through recruiter Arnold Deutsch. By identifying members of the British administrative elite while still in their formative years, the Soviets exploited the British class system to place assets in the trajectory of future power. This "slow-burn" recruitment strategy ensured that by the time these men ascended to senior bureaucratic positions, they were fully professionalized agents of a foreign power, creating a network effect that acted as a force multiplier. New research suggests this network extended to approximately 22 individuals beyond the core five, creating a pervasive intelligence web within the Britis...