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LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman says people are underestimating AI's impact on jobs, but it won't be a 'bloodbath'

19 June 2025 at 12:48
Reid Hoffman, the cofounder of LinkedIn, thinks AI will transform, not eliminate, jobs.
Reid Hoffman, the cofounder of LinkedIn, thinks AI will transform, not eliminate, jobs.

Dominik Bindl/Getty Images

  • Reid Hoffman said AI will transform jobs, but he doesn't think it will cause a 'bloodbath.'
  • The LinkedIn cofounder was referring to comments made by Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei last month.
  • Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has also disagreed with Anthropic's AI job loss predictions.

Reid Hoffman, the venture capitalist who cofounded LinkedIn, said AI will transform jobs, but he rejected the idea that it will result in a "bloodbath" for job seekers.

"Yes, I think people are underestimating AI's impact on jobs," Hoffman said on an episode of the Rapid Response podcast, released Tuesday.

"But I think inducing panic as a response is serving media announcement purposes," he said, "and not actually, in fact, intelligent industry and economic and career path planning."

The podcast's host, Bob Safian, asked Hoffman about comments made by Dario Amodei, CEO of AI firm Anthropic, in May.

In an interview with Axios, Amodei warned that AI companies and governments needed to stop "sugarcoating" the potential for mass job losses in white-collar industries like finance, law, and consulting.

"We, as the producers of this technology, have a duty and an obligation to be honest about what is coming," Amodei said.

He estimated that AI could spike unemployment by up to 20% in the next five years, and may eliminate half of entry-level white-collar jobs within that same period.

Hoffman said he had called the Anthropic CEO to discuss it.

"'Bloodbath' is a very good way to grab internet headlines, media headlines," Hoffman said. (Axios, not Amodei, used the phrase "white-collar bloodbath.")

But, Hoffman added, "bloodbath just implies everything going away."

He said he disagreed with this assessment, believing that transformation, not mass elimination, of jobs is a more likely outcome.

"Dario is right that over a decade or three, there will be a massive set of job transformation," Hoffman said.

But he compared it to the introduction of tools like Microsoft Excel, which were believed by some at the time to mark the end of accountancy roles.

"In fact, the accountant job got broader, richer," Hoffman said.

He added: "Just because a function's coming that has a replacement area on a certain set of tasks doesn't mean all of this job's going to get replaced."

Instead of AI eliminating roles, Hoffman predicted: "We at least have many years, if not a long time, of person-plus-AI doing things."

Hoffman isn't the only business leader to question Amodei's AI doomsday prophecy.

Speaking at VivaTech in Paris earlier this month, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said he and Amodei "pretty much disagree with almost everything" on AI.

"One, he believes that AI is so scary that only they should do it," Huang said. "Two, that AI is so expensive, nobody else should do it."

Huang added, "And three, AI is so incredibly powerful that everyone will lose their jobs, which explains why they should be the only company building it."

Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

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Putin's war-fueled economy is 'on the brink' of recession, minister says

19 June 2025 at 12:15
Maxim Reshetnikov, left, and Vladimir Putin, right.
Maxim Reshetnikov, left, said the Russian economy is cooling.

Contributor/Getty Images

  • Russia's economy is on the brink of recession, the country's economy minister said.
  • Maxim Reshetnikov said at an economic forum that data shows its economy is cooling.
  • Russia is facing stubborn inflation, labor shortages, and the impact of Western sanctions.

The Russian economy is "on the brink" of entering a recession, the country's economy minister warned on Thursday.

Speaking at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, a major annual business event in Russia, Maxim Reshetnikov said data showed the economy "cooling."

When a moderator asked him to describe the state of the economy, he said it seemed that the country was "on the verge of going into recession," according to Russian news agency Interfax.

He later clarified that he wasn't making an outright prediction. "I said that we were on the brink," Reshetnikov said. "From here on out, everything will depend on our decisions."

Reshetnikov has already raised concerns about the direction of the Russian economy. In May, while addressing the State Duma, he said that the economy was cooling so sharply it risked entering a state of economic "hypothermia."

In that address, Reshetnikov urged Russia's central bank to take into account easing inflation when setting interest rates. On June 6, the bank did just that, cutting its key interest rate from 21% to 20%, citing signs of declining inflation.

While inflation is easing slightly, it has remained stubbornly high โ€” now hovering around 10% โ€” since spiking in the wake of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Hard or soft landing?

The central bank's moves to dampen inflation meant a sharp economic slowdown was inevitable and even intentional, said Brigitte Granville, professor of international economics and economic policy at Queen Mary, University of London.

"The key question has always been whether the Russian economy would undergo a 'hard landing' โ€” meaning inflation would be brought under control at the cost of tipping the economy into recession โ€” or a 'soft landing,' where inflation moderates without triggering a recession," she told BI in an email.

Even if a technical recession did occur, Granville said Russia's labour market remained extremely tight, supporting wage growth. "Even a hard landing would not have serious consequences for the sustainability of Russia's war effort."

All in on defense

Since the start of the war, Russia has gone all in on defense spending.

It's on track to spend about $130 billion on defense, roughly a third of its federal budget, up from 28.3% in 2024.

It's also potentially running low on cash, with one Swedish economist predicting that Russia could run out of liquid reserves as soon as this fall.

The country is still grappling with the effects of Western sanctions, which have targeted its oil and gas exports and largely cut financial institutions off from the international financial communication system SWIFT.

Russia's economy is also suffering from a severe labor shortage, driven in part by the military mobilization, as well as a brain drain of young professionals leaving the country.

According to state media, Russia had a shortfall of some 2.6 million workers at the end of 2024, with shortages hitting the manufacturing, trade, and transportation sectors especially hard.

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Air India says it's cutting international flights after deadly crash and Middle East conflict

19 June 2025 at 10:14
Forensic experts and DGCA officials searching for evidence at Air India Plane crash site, on June 13, 2025.
Air India flight AI171 crashed shortly after takeoff, killing 241 of the 242 people on board.

Raju Shinde/Hindustan Times via Getty Images

  • Air India is cutting international flights by 15% after a deadly crash and conflict in the Middle East.
  • The crash, which killed 241, involved a Boeing 787. The airline is conducting checks on its fleet.
  • Fighting between Israel and Iran has closed airspace, causing airlines to suspend some flights.

Air India announced Wednesday it would cut its international schedule by 15% in the coming weeks, citing last week's deadly plane crash and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

"The curtailments are a painful measure to take, but are necessary following a devastating event which we are still working through and an unusual combination of external events," the airline said in a statement provided to Business Insider.

On June 12, Air India flight AI171 from Ahmedabad to London crashed shortly after takeoff, killing 241 of the 242 people on board.

It's still not clear what caused the Boeing 787 Dreamliner to crash minutes after take-off. India's civil aviation ministry has held just one press conference since the crash, and questions weren't allowed.

"The investigating authorities are continuing their efforts to find out the reasons for the accident," Air India said in its statement.

It added that the reduction in international services was due in part to a safety review of its aircraft.

The airline said India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation, which regulates the country's civil aviation industry, had ordered enhanced safety inspections across Air India's Boeing 787-8/9 aircraft fleet.

It said that, as of Wednesday, 26 of 33 planes had been inspected and cleared for service, with the remaining seven still under inspection.

It also said it was conducting its own "enhanced safety checks" on its Boeing 777 fleet as an added precaution.

But these aren't the only reasons for the cuts to international services.

Air India also cited geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, where both Iranian and Israeli airspace has been closed following an Israeli strike on Iran last Friday.

The two countries have continued to trade aerial strikes, leading to Israel's flagship carrier, El Al Airlines, suspending all flights until further notice.

Several global airlines, including Emirates and Etihad, have also suspended flights to Tel Aviv and Tehran.

Air India said that due to "certain disruptions" to international operations over the six days before Wednesday, it had canceled 83 flights.

The airline said the 15% cuts to international services on widebody aircraft would continue until at least mid-July.

"This effectively adds to our reserve aircraft availability to take care of any unplanned disruptions," it said.

The airline said it would try to rebook affected passengers on alternative flights, but they can also choose to reschedule or request a full refund.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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