Fidelity is growing its workforce. Blame AI.
When
The financial services behemoth stood out from a growing list of companies — Amazon, Block, and Meta among them — that have been quick to cite AI as the reason for axing thousands of jobs. They claim rapidly evolving chatbots and AI agents are allowing them to do more with fewer people.
Perhaps more surprising was that the family-controlled company led by
Overall, Fidelity, which employs more than 80,000 people worldwide, is aiming to add 3,300 new jobs this year in addition to filling 2,000 open positions even as it pares its senior leadership ranks.
Why it matters: Fidelity’s hiring priorities show that AI can’t meet all of its immediate development requirements.
The company has been incorporating AI into its operations for years, but it needs real-world techies and other hands-on workers to roll out key products and services right now.
“The problem with AI is that there is a massive supply bottleneck [even though] they are slapping up data centers as fast as they can,"
“Some companies may be shifting back to hiring smart, bushy-tailed [computer science] grads to move things forward instead of waiting in the AI queue," he said.
The big picture: The issue, of course, is what happens in a year or two, and there’s widespread concern that AI will be a job killer.
Seventy-one percent of employed white-collar workers and 73 percent of blue-collar workers expect AI advancements to lead to a decrease in job openings, according to a
Their fears aren’t unfounded.
In February, when Block, the parent of Square, cut 40 percent of its workforce, chief executive
“Something has changed," he wrote on social media. “We’re already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company."
In March, layoffs in the information sector — which includes many tech jobs, as well as those in media and telecommunications — rose to 66,000, according to the most recent data from the
To be sure: Companies like Block could very well be engaging in “AI washing" — using AI as an excuse to cover up for over-hiring during the pandemic, competitive pressures, or plain bad management.
And every new wave of breakthrough technology, from the Industrial Revolution to the internet, has sparked talk of mass unemployment that never became reality. Instead, occupations highly exposed to new technology have seen painful job losses, even as jobs in different sectors were created, productivity rose, and the economy as a whole expanded.
Final thought: Prior tech innovations replaced physical labor and some routine cognitive work.
AI may yet dramatically remake the workforce. But companies such as Fidelity can’t wait. They have work to get done now.



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