(A Personal Perspective)

Welcome to Deskan Show.
Here, I try to understand how technology quietly changes the structure of everyday life.
These are simply my personal observations—not predictions carved in stone.
AI Is No Longer a Future Concept
For a long time, artificial intelligence felt distant. Something experimental. Something technical. But that distance is disappearing quickly. AI is no longer just a tool for engineers—it is becoming part of how businesses operate, how decisions are made, and how work is valued.
From my perspective, AI’s biggest economic impact is not speed or automation. It is redefinition. It changes what counts as “skilled,” “valuable,” and “replaceable.”
Productivity Without More People
One of the clearest economic effects of AI is efficiency. Tasks that once required teams can now be handled by fewer people with better tools. This does not necessarily mean immediate mass unemployment—but it does mean slower hiring and higher expectations.
Companies can grow without growing their workforce at the same pace. That quietly reshapes the economy by shifting power toward systems rather than individuals.
Jobs Likely to Shrink or Disappear
AI tends to affect work that is repetitive, rule-based, or heavily pattern-driven. From what I can see, roles most at risk include:
Data entry and basic administrative work Routine accounting and bookkeeping Simple customer support and call-center roles Basic translation and transcription Entry-level content production
These jobs are not disappearing because they lack value, but because their structure fits too neatly into what machines do well.
Jobs That Are Likely to Evolve—Not Vanish
Some roles will not disappear, but they will change significantly. Professionals in these fields may find themselves working with AI rather than being replaced by it:
Accountants who focus on judgment rather than calculation Designers who guide creative direction rather than execution Marketers who interpret data rather than generate it Educators who shift from information delivery to mentoring
From my point of view, these jobs survive because they rely on context, responsibility, and human trust.
New Jobs That Are Emerging
AI does not only remove work—it also creates new forms of it. Some emerging roles feel unfamiliar now, but may become common:
AI tool specialists and workflow designers Human–AI collaboration managers Data ethics and compliance roles AI content editors and reviewers Trainers who teach people how to work alongside AI
What’s interesting is that many of these roles are less about coding, and more about translation—between humans, systems, and expectations.
The Deeper Economic Shift
What feels most significant to me is that AI changes how people think about effort and value. When output increases without proportional human input, traditional ideas about productivity, wages, and career paths start to feel unstable.
The economy may not collapse—but it will likely become less predictable. Linear career growth may give way to fragmented paths, project-based work, and constant reskilling.
Final Thoughts
I don’t see AI as a simple job-destroyer or job-creator. I see it as a force that rearranges priorities. It rewards adaptability more than expertise, and judgment more than routine.
These are just my personal thoughts while observing how technology reshapes economic behavior.
In the future, the most valuable skill may not be knowing the right answers—but knowing how to work when the answers are constantly changing.