As AI upends humanity, we must focus on what makes us human
The increasing prevalence of artificial intelligence (AI) is raising concerns about employability, particularly for recent graduates. In China, youth unemployment is nearly 17%, and a Stanford study indicated a 16% decline in entry-level employment in AI-exposed occupations in the US since 2022.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe increasing prevalence of artificial intelligence (AI) is raising concerns about employability, particularly for recent graduates. In China, youth unemployment is nearly 17%, and a Stanford study indicated a 16% decline in entry-level employment in AI-exposed occupations in the US since 2022. This has led to public anxiety, with some individuals booing a former Google CEO's praise of AI's impact. Additionally, a Chinese court has ruled it illegal for companies to lay off employees solely because AI could be a cheaper replacement. These developments highlight a growing societal challenge in adapting to AI's influence on the job market.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedYouth unemployment on the Chinese mainland stands at almost 17 per cent.
A Chinese court ruled it is illegal for firms to lay off employees because an AI replacement would be cheaper.
A Stanford paper found a 16% relative decline in entry-level employment among AI-exposed occupations in the US since 2022.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt was booed during a commencement speech for praising AI's impact.