David Autor
@davidautor.bsky.social
π€ 437
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
13 days ago
π£ Come work with us! π We're hiring Predoctoral Researchers to work closely with
@dacemoglumit.bsky.social
,
@davidautor.bsky.social
, and
@simonhrjohnson.bsky.social
π Apply by September 21 to meet the priority deadline:
shapingwork.mit.edu/careers/
#econ_ra
#econsky
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
20 days ago
Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
was interviewed on
@cbsnews.com
about how AI is affecting job searches, particularly for entry-level workers.
www.cbsnews.com/news/how-is-...
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How is artificial intelligence affecting job searches?
AI has already become a disruptor in the labor market, as job postings declined over the past year by 6.7%, with entry-level positions especially hard-hit. But not all industries are affected by the p...
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-is-artificial-intelligence-affecting-job-searches/
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
29 days ago
In
@theatlantic.com
, co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
and James Manyika explain why we should insist on developing AI as a collaboration tool, not just for automation β and what this would look like in practice.
www.theatlantic.com/technology/a...
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A Better Way to Think About AI
AI can be used to automate tasksβand entire jobs. But it could also be designed to collaborate with humans. David Autor and James Manyika on why we should focus on the latter:
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2025/08/ai-job-loss-human-enhancement-google/683963/
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
2 months ago
Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
explains findings from his new research with Neil Thompson. Automation (including AI) can make a job more or less "expert," raising or lowering wages, depending on the nature of the tasks it removes and/or creates. Watch the full clip:
youtu.be/1lOOKvufS4w
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
3 months ago
"One of the great challenges of our era is to figure out how to create tools, AIs, that support people using their expertise better and learning faster." Hear more from
@davidautor.bsky.social
on the Possible podcast with
@reidhoffman.bsky.social
:
youtu.be/MGKUTVyqJlI
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A Threat Bigger than China | MIT Economist David Autor
YouTube video by Reid Hoffman
https://youtu.be/MGKUTVyqJlI
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
3 months ago
The MIT Shaping the Future of Work Initiative is now the James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work. Hear from our co-directors
@dacemoglumit.bsky.social
,
@davidautor.bsky.social
, and
@simonhrjohnson.bsky.social
about our mission and goals for the years ahead.
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
3 months ago
(1/4) When some job tasks are automated, do the tasks that remain become more or less valuable? π§΅π In a new working paper,
@davidautor.bsky.social
and Neil Thompson argue the answer depends on how much expertise is required for the tasks still done by humans.
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
3 months ago
A recent article from
@stanfordhai.bsky.social
highlights insights from co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
on how automation affects jobs β and why focusing solely on a job's exposure to automation misses the point.
hai.stanford.edu/news/assessi...
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Assessing the Real Impact of Automation on Jobs | Stanford HAI
MIT economist David Autor argues that focusing on exposure alone misses the nuances of how experts and nonexperts experience task shifts.
https://hai.stanford.edu/news/assessing-the-real-impact-of-automation-on-jobs
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
4 months ago
We asked co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
if he thinks US tariffs and trade policy signal the end of the globalization era. He explains: "I don't think globalization is over, but I think the US leadership of globalization may be over."
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reposted by
David Autor
Sage
4 months ago
βI feel like if we use AI well, it's actually complementary to the knowledge that many people have.β Economist
@davidautor.bsky.social
βͺof
@mitshapingwork.bsky.social
discusses changes to the labor market on a new Social Science Bites episode. Listen now:
www.socialsciencespace.com/2025/06/davi...
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I'm delighted to announce this next chapter for
@mitshapingwork.bsky.social
. Support from the Stone Foundation will enable us β and many others β to focus our efforts towards shaping a labor market that offers opportunity, mobility and economic security to a far broader set of people.
add a skeleton here at some point
4 months ago
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
5 months ago
Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
explains key findings from his recent NBER working paper, co-authored with our research affiliate
@profdaviddorn.bsky.social
, Gordon Hanson, Maggie Jones, and Bradley Setzler. Read the paper:
shapingwork.mit.edu/research/pla...
#EconSky
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
6 months ago
Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
, whose landmark research defined the "China Shock," argues that the US should invest in its own capacity to build cutting-edge technologies. However, blanket tariffs will not achieve this goal. Watch the full clip:
youtu.be/tjdiEQdSmPQ
#EconSky
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I'm honored that MIT Press selected my book with Elisabeth Reynolds and David Mindell for this award.
add a skeleton here at some point
6 months ago
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
6 months ago
What makes work valuable? Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
explains how expertise makes certain types of labor more valuable than others β but only if that expertise is both useful and scarce. "Expertise is intrinsically a moving target ... It changes over time."
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
6 months ago
Co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
explains key insights from his recent QJE paper, which finds that 60% of the work we do today didn't exist in 1940. Read New Frontiers: The Origins and Content of New Work, 1940-2018:
shapingwork.mit.edu/research/new...
Full clip:
youtu.be/A3-nEP1oyeA
#EconSky
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reposted by
David Autor
Cooked Illustrations
7 months ago
What keeps us busy in an automated age? Simple: "We create new variety and new depth to what we do," says
@davidautor.bsky.social
of
@mitshapingwork.bsky.social
. In this article, we cover his analyses of how AI could commodity expertise, or make a little expertise go further.
#scicomm
#genai
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reposted by
David Autor
MIT Stone Center on Inequality and Shaping the Future of Work
7 months ago
Our co-director
@davidautor.bsky.social
explains how AI, when implemented as a decision support tool, can potentially revitalize middle-skill work by extending the value of expertise to workers with less formal education. Watch the video:
youtu.be/66fYniAyCk0
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Professor David Autor on how AI could help rebuild the middle class
YouTube video by MIT Shaping the Future of Work Initiative
https://youtu.be/66fYniAyCk0
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