Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 29
Schneider Electric Deploys AI Across 160,000-Worker Group to Lift Productivity, Not Cut Jobs
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 29

Schneider Electric Deploys AI Across 160,000-Worker Group to Lift Productivity, Not Cut Jobs

4 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 29
  • Schneider Electric is rolling out AI across its nearly 160,000-person workforce with the stated goal of boosting employee productivity rather than using the technology to drive layoffs.
  • Philippe Rambach, the French company's chief AI officer, said Schneider began by pinpointing repetitive and tedious tasks that waste workers' time and distract them from higher-value work.
  • The approach contrasts with a recent wave of AI-linked job cuts at other companies, where executives have framed success in terms of eliminating roles and reducing labor costs.
  • Stanford economist Erik Brynjolfsson said that view is too narrow, arguing companies can generate larger gains by using AI to augment workers instead of replacing them.
Beyond profits, does a company’s choice to replace or augment workers with AI reveal its core ethical values?
With most AI investments showing zero return, is the dream of AI-driven productivity just an expensive illusion for businesses?
As AI eliminates entry-level jobs, how can the next generation build a career when the first step is gone?