Gresham College Lectures

A World Without Work - Daniel Susskind

6 snips
May 1, 2026
Daniel Susskind, economist and author who studies AI and the future of work. He explores how AI could erase large swathes of human tasks and why past automation fears might not apply. He examines task encroachment, reasons to take human-level AI seriously, and the big social challenges if demand for human labor shrinks.
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INSIGHT

Relentless Task Encroachment Explains Automation Trends

  • Technological task encroachment steadily expands machines into manual, cognitive, and affective tasks.
  • Daniel Susskind shows this is a long-run process where successive innovations keep taking on activities once reserved for humans.
INSIGHT

Human Plus AI Advantage Dissolves When Machines Surpass Us

  • The productivity effect that once boosted human jobs can fade as machines outperform humans at complementary tasks.
  • Susskind uses chess (Kasparov, centaur teams, AlphaZero) and sat-nav/driving to show human-plus-machine gains can vanish when machines surpass the human contribution.
INSIGHT

A Larger Economy Can Still Need Fewer Workers

  • The bigger pie effect (growth raising demand) won't guarantee jobs if machines can perform the work required to produce more goods.
  • Susskind cites UK agriculture and manufacturing: output rose while employment fell dramatically.
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