At least in software engineering, AI can't replace the accountability that only humans can provide, but it multiplies the surface area that a human is accountable for, driving up the work demands on worker in one dimension while it lowers the demand for actual coding. On balance, it's more work down with far fewer people.
> It also squares with what we're seeing so far. AI is reshaping jobs, not wiping them out. Tasks move around, productivity may go up, yet employment and hours haven't shifted much – at least yet. In many cases, the bundle is still holding.
AI will supercharge the decades-old trend of productivity growth dramatically outpacing both employment and compensation, as the returns go primarily to the owners of capital.
The result: a lack of job growth while productivity still rises, and also stagnant wages as workers lose the labor market leverage.
I haven't seen anyone talk about AI and its impact on flow yet. It's pretty easy for me to achieve a flow state while coding without AI, but with AI, I'm not so sure. I spend my time managing multiple Claude instances as they work on different tasks, and there's no time to go really deep into anything.
Flow was such a productivity boost for me. Even though Claude definitely helps me finish tasks quicker, I've started wondering how much quicker it actually is, vs getting into flow.
Hardware will continue to improve, and eventually you'll have the choice of reaching a flow state with 2026 models, or using frontier models at our current level of performance.
The “bundle” or “context” is the value.
I myself have gone back to hands on coding in last 6 months along with managing the team. so now I am doing both developer and manager role. company loves it obviously but I am not getting paid more to do both and juniors in my team are under severe pressure to show thier worth. thats not unbundling thats just squeezing people. And companies will continue to do it.
Humans are left deciding the direction, choosing what matters and what to spend attention on, and making judgement calls on the edge cases.
In the future, everyone is a CEO. How many CEOs are there though in that future? Probably not 8 billion
I'm just glad that the tea party of corporate programming is over. Whatever comes next, it cannot possibly be worse.
Obviously react/js didn't cause job apocalypse... Quite the opposite. It's just another abstraction layer making it possible to build a full application with less text. Prompts are the same pattern again IMO
We have managers using chatbot to write code instead of engineers themselves.
Company after company using AI for everything over humans.
If you say that AI is not killing job in 2026, you are delusional.
Is this sarcasm?
If you believe otherwise, you either don't know what is going on or you are not being affected by AI.
There are plenty of high skilled blue-collar folks who can no longer find job because AI is doing "the same" for cheap.
The kind that knows better and can make categorical assertions about other people with no deduction or reasoning and can make baseless claims without any kind of evidence.
Thank you for the reveal.