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AI is displacing office jobs. What skills will children need

AI is rapidly displacing office work. Instead of the mantra that AI frees people for creativity, business is taking an ROI-first approach and automating the mos

AI is displacing office jobs. What skills will children need
Source: Habr AI. Collage: Hamidun News.
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The promise to implement AI to free humans from routine has not materialized. Instead, companies follow ROI-first logic — automating the highest-paid and most routine work.

Office professions under attack

Office professions have become the main target of AI. They often consist of repetitive operations: data processing, form filling, report analysis, document preparation. AI does all of this faster and cheaper.

The lag between AI's theoretical capabilities and its real implementation in business is shrinking rapidly. A year ago, it seemed that employment changes would take years. Now major corporations are already introducing AI assistants for office workers — not as helpers, but as tools for staff reduction.

The most expensive specialists came under fire:

  • Lawyers and notaries (contract analysis, legal opinions)
  • Accountants and financial analysts (invoice processing, tax planning)
  • Junior and mid-level developers (frontend, routine functions)
  • Copywriters, editors and marketers (content creation, trend analysis)
  • Data analysts (report preparation, visualization)

They faced layoffs first — not because specialists became scarce, but because their work is easiest to automate.

One profession is no longer enough

A sense of déjà vu. When today's students' parents entered Soviet factories, they were greeted with: "Forget everything you learned at the institute — we have our own rules here." It was a joke, but with a grain of truth: education provides a foundation, but the market dictates entirely different rules.

Today it's the same, but on a global scale. A person who learned one profession at age 20 discovers by age 35 that their specialty has either been displaced or fundamentally changed. One profession is insufficient for either results or guarantees.

What do we need instead? Not a certificate or diploma, but skills that remain relevant:

  • Ability to learn quickly — independently seek knowledge and master new tools
  • Critical thinking — understand what AI generates, where it fails, how to use it
  • Skill to work alongside AI — as a colleague, not an enemy

This isn't about becoming a programmer. It's about remaining in demand in any profession.

How to prepare children

Children should be prepared for change, not for one profession. The school education model assumes: study for 4-5 years, work for 40 years. This model is dead.

The future is constant retraining, role changes, adaptation.

"Education prepared people for stability.

We need to prepare them for change."

Parents don't need to choose a profession for their child in 10th grade. They need to develop universal skills: communication, analytics, creativity, ability to learn, understanding of how technology works.

What this means

The conclusion is not catastrophism. AI displaces not people's lives, but outdated positions. People have time to retrain — they only need the willingness to learn quickly and continuously.

For the generation of children currently in school, this is already the norm, not a shock.

ZK
Hamidun News
AI news without noise. Daily editorial selection from 400+ sources. A product by Zhemal Khamidun, Head of AI at Alpina Digital.
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