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Updated May 19, 2026 · 10:36
Technology News Updated May 19, 2026

Anthropic CEO Warns AI Will Replace Entry-Level Jobs, Trigger Employment Crisis

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warns of a "serious employment crisis" as AI rapidly advances to replace entry-level white-collar jobs. In a Fox News interview, he stated AI has progressed from a smart high school student to beyond a college level in just two years. He predicts big effects on employment within one to five years, particularly in finance, consulting, and tech. Amodei suggests solutions include educating workers to use AI, government policy measures, and potentially taxing AI companies.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warns of "serious employment crisis" as AI set to replace entry-level jobs

Washington DC, May 19

CEO of the AI company Anthropic, Dario Amodei, warned that rapid advances in artificial intelligence could trigger a "serious employment crisis" by replacing large numbers of entry-level white-collar jobs across industries.

Speaking about the pace of AI development in a Fox News Interview, Amodei said the technology has advanced dramatically in just two years. "Two years ago, it was at the level of a smart high school student; now it's probably at the level of a smart college student and reaching beyond that," he said.

While highlighting AI's potential benefits in areas such as medicine and energy, Amodei warned that the same capabilities could disrupt employment in sectors heavily dependent on analytical and administrative work.

"Things like summarizing a document, brainstorming, putting together a financial report, makes me worry a lot that entry-level jobs in areas like finance, consulting, tech, many, many other areas like that, entry-level white-collar work. I worry that those things are going to be first augmented, but before long replaced by AI systems. It's hard to predict the future, but we may indeed have a serious employment crisis on our hands as the pipeline for this early-stage white-collar work starts to contract and dry up," he said.

Amodei cautioned that the impact could emerge quickly, saying, "I would not be surprised if somewhere between one and five years, we started to see big effects here."

The Anthropic CEO said many industry leaders privately share similar concerns, but that the public and lawmakers are not fully aware of the scale of the challenge.

"I've heard a number of people talk about this in private. AI CEOs talk about this in private, CEOs of other companies talk about this in private," he said. "I really felt that the message that this is happening hasn't been getting out to ordinary people, hasn't been getting out to our legislators, our congresspeople either."

Amodei argued that the growth of AI cannot realistically be halted because of intense global competition, particularly between American and Chinese companies.

"I don't think we can stop the AI bus," he said. "Even if all six companies stopped, then China would beat us."

However, he stressed that governments and companies still have an opportunity to shape how AI affects workers and economies. "One of the first steps we're taking is just measuring the effects," he said, referring to Anthropic's Economic Index initiative aimed at tracking AI's impact on employment.

Discussing possible solutions, Amodei said worker adaptation and public policy would both play crucial roles. "I think one is just educating people in order to use AI," he said, adding that governments may also need to consider measures "to level the economic playing field."

In one of his most striking remarks, Amodei suggested that taxation of AI firms could eventually become necessary."This may be a controversial proposal, but something like taxing AI companies like us-- we may need to get to things like that eventually," he said.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

In India, AI replacing entry-level jobs is a nightmare scenario. Our IT-BPO sector employs millions in exactly these roles. And with competition from China accelerating development, we can't even slow it down. I appreciate him being honest instead of giving corporate sugar-coating.

James A

Taxing AI companies feels like a band-aid solution. Shouldn't we instead focus on universal basic income or massive education reforms? The speed of disruption means millions could lose jobs before we figure out the next step.

Vikram M

I appreciate that he's sounding the alarm, but he's also biased - his company profits from this disruption. However, the point about China-USA competition is spot on. For India, outsourcing destinations will be hit hardest. We need to build our own AI capabilities rather than just being consumers.

Ananya R

As a recent MBA grad looking for roles in consulting and finance, this is terrifying. We were told these were "future-proof" careers. Now they're saying entry-level analysis and report-writing could be obsolete in 3-5 years? Our education system hasn't even adapted to the last wave of technology changes 😢

Sarah B

It's not all doom and gloom - AI creates new jobs too. But the transition period will be brutal. His suggestion that governments shape the impact is crucial. In India, we need massive upskilling programs and perhaps a "digital retraining allowance" for affected workers.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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