Treasury Secretary Mnuchin says AI taking US jobs is '50-100 more years' away — but it's already beginning to happen
steven mnuchin
steven mnuchin

(Steven Mnuchin.Yuri Gripas/Reuters)

On Friday, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin answered a slew of questions in an interview with Axios' Mike Allen about the global economy and US labor market, including about the threat of artificial intelligence (AI) affecting American jobs.

Mnuchin is not overly worried. Concerns about AI and jobs are so far way "it's not even on our radar screen... 50-100 more years" away, he said, according to Axios.

"I'm not worried at all" about robots displacing humans in the near future, he said, before adding, "In fact, I'm optimistic."

However, studies have estimated that AI could affect jobs much sooner than that. And, crucially, technological advancements will likely not only be impacting the manufacturing sector.

In a paper published in 2013, Oxford University's Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne looked at which current jobs are susceptible to technological innovations such as machine learning, and estimated the probability that the 702 different occupations they looked at will be computerized.

Notably, they did not estimate the number of jobs that will actually be automated, but rather a given occupation's "potential job automatability" over an unspecified number of years.

They found that about 47% of total US employment is in the high risk category, which the team defined as jobs they expect could be automated "relatively soon, perhaps over the next decade or two."

They discuss the model and its results in greater detail (emphasis ours):

"Our model predicts that most workers in transportation and logistical occupations, together with the bulk of office and administrative support workers, and labor in production occupations, are at risk. These finds are consistent with recent technological developments documented in the literature. More surprisingly, we find that a substantial share of employment in service occupations, where most US job growth has occurred over the past decades (Autor and Dorn, 2013) are highly susceptible to computerization. Additional support for this finding is provided by the recent growth in the market for service robots (MGI, 2013) and the gradually diminishment of the comparative advantage of human labor in tasks involving mobility and dexterity (Robotics-VO, 2013)."

Osborne and Frey included a chart in their paper showing the probability of computerization for a given job versus the number of people employed in that job:

jobs killed by technology
jobs killed by technology

(Michael Osborne and Carl Benedikt Frey/Oxford University)

High-skill jobs under the categories of "management, business, and financial," "healthcare practitioners and technical," and "computer, engineering, and science" saw lower likelihoods of automation, while "service," "sales and related," "transportation and material moving," and "office and administrative support" have higher probabilities.