It’s no longer a hypothetical question. Has AI begun to replace human jobs? Recent headlines suggest that the answer is yes—and it’s happening faster and more quietly than we might think. According to The New York Times, some companies are employing a practice known as ‘silent firing’, making roles so unbearable that employees quit, only to be replaced by AI. No need for layoffs or pink slips—just let the machines slip in and quietly take over.
And it’s not limited to one sector or role. Amazon’s recent push to get employees back to the office five days a week, despite widespread dissatisfaction, is more than just a mandate for in-person collaboration. George Kailas, CEO of Prospero.AI, argues it’s a strategic move to filter out anyone unwilling to adapt to Amazon’s rigid expectations as they push further into automation. Fewer complaints, fewer workers, more robots—Amazon’s formula for ‘efficiency’.
Google, another tech giant, is also quietly marching toward an automated future. CEO Sundar Pichai recently revealed that over a quarter of new code at Google is generated by AI. Engineers review and approve the work, sure, but the message is clear: the machines are now producing work that humans used to do. And, not surprisingly, Google has reduced its workforce by over a thousand employees in the past year. As productivity goes up, headcounts go down.
Even in India, automation has crept into the aviation industry, with Indigo Airlines’ automated check-in stations at Delhi airport making it clear that front-line jobs are at risk. This isn’t a preview of a futuristic landscape—it’s the reality unfolding right now.
The experts speak, but do they really get it?
Of course, the naysayers insist we’re overreacting. Economist Daron Acemoglu of MIT claims that AI will only be able to replace 5 per cent of jobs within the next decade. He assures us that AI isn’t advanced enough to replicate the complexity of human tasks and that the technology is still dependent on human oversight. According to him, we’re decades away from a meaningful economic revolution driven by AI. But is that optimism, or just an inability to see the ground shifting beneath our feet?
Acemoglu’s argument misses the point: AI doesn’t need to replace all jobs to reshape the job market fundamentally. Incremental replacement has already begun, and with every task that shifts to AI, companies become less reliant on human skills. He might claim it’s just a 5 per cent shift, but that’s still millions of workers forced to confront an unsettling truth: the machines are nibbling at the edges of our careers, and they’re not stopping.
AI and the new anxiety: The invisible toll on human workers
It’s not just jobs on the line; it’s the emotional toll on workers. A survey by Oracle recently revealed that 51 per cent of employees worry AI will make their skills obsolete, leaving them feeling anxious, threatened, and psychologically unmoored. This isn’t idle paranoia. When AI quietly takes over roles or parts of roles, employees are left feeling devalued. They wonder if their unique skills—things they once took pride in—are still valuable in a world where algorithms can perform data analysis, generate content, and execute tasks with cold, calculated precision.
And yet, as AI proliferates, transparency is nowhere to be found. In that same survey, over half of the employees polled said they had no idea how their companies were actually using AI. That opacity breeds fear and uncertainty. Workers are more likely to jump to conclusions about their job security, while executives reap the benefits of AI-driven productivity without addressing the impact on their workforce’s morale or well-being.
When you keep workers in the dark, anxiety and burnout skyrocket. It’s a toxic cocktail: employees who feel undervalued and disconnected from their organisation’s goals are more likely to experience job dissatisfaction, depression, and mental exhaustion. This isn’t the result of human limitations; it’s a direct consequence of how companies choose to wield technology.
Why the real problem isn’t AI, but how companies use it
Here’s the hard truth: AI is a tool, not a replacement. It may be able to churn out code or perform basic data analysis, but it lacks the essential qualities that make humans irreplaceable—intuition, empathy, creativity, and ethical reasoning. Machines can follow patterns, but they cannot innovate or solve complex problems in novel ways. That’s where humans still hold the advantage, and that’s the strength companies should be investing in.
Yet most companies don’t see it this way. Rather than viewing AI as a tool to enhance human potential, they’re treating it as a way to cut costs, reduce headcount, and drive ‘efficiency.’ It’s a short-sighted strategy that risks undermining their greatest asset: a skilled, motivated, and engaged workforce. Instead of empowering employees to use AI as a complement to their skills, organisations are leaving them to wonder when they’ll be quietly shown the door.
The solution is transparency and collaboration, not competition. Companies that are genuinely interested in long-term success should communicate openly with employees about AI’s role in the workplace. Provide training on how to leverage AI as a productivity tool, rather than letting fear take hold. Equip workers to see AI as an asset that enhances their work, not as a spectre lurking in the background, waiting to make them redundant.
AI and human workers: A partnership or a power struggle?
So, where do we go from here? The question isn’t just whether AI will replace us, but whether we’ll allow it to reshape the workplace at the expense of human talent. AI should be a tool that frees humans to tackle complex, creative challenges, not a weapon used to thin the ranks.
In the end, the fate of AI in the workplace will depend on how companies choose to wield it. If they continue to prioritise short-term gains over long-term sustainability, we will see a workforce driven by fear, demoralised, and ultimately less productive. But if they recognise the unique qualities humans bring—qualities that AI will never replicate—then the future of work could look very different.
The truth is, AI is here to stay. It will transform industries, reshape roles, and challenge us to adapt. But whether it becomes a force for human advancement or a quiet destroyer of livelihoods depends on one thing: our willingness to see machines as partners, not replacements. Let AI handle the routine, the repetitive, and the mundane—but let humans continue to dream, innovate, and lead. The future of work is not an either-or scenario. It’s about finding balance, purpose, and, above all, valuing what makes us irreplaceably human.
1 Comment
As per CNN report @61% of large us firm plan to use AI by next one year to automated task which one previously done by company employees.
The survey is released by finance chief those tasks ; paying to supplier, preparing Invoice, and financial reporting also.