AI HR Daily by OVI

AI Is Splitting the Job Market in Two — The IMF Just Proved It

1 h 0 min · 18. juli 2026
episode AI Is Splitting the Job Market in Two — The IMF Just Proved It cover

Beskrivelse

The IMF's January 2026 research reveals something counterintuitive: AI is simultaneously creating better jobs and squeezing out an entire tier of the workforce. High-skilled workers are capturing wage premiums. Low-skilled workers are benefiting from increased consumption spending. But middle-skilled workers — your operations analysts, project coordinators, and administrative managers — are seeing zero statistically significant gains. This is job polarization, and it's accelerating. In this episode, we break down what the IMF's Staff Discussion Note found: one in ten job vacancies in advanced economies now requires new AI-era skills that command a 3 to 3.4 percent wage premium. And in cities where AI-skill demand rises, average wages across the board go up 2.3 percent. But that rising tide isn't reaching the middle — and in high-exposure, low-complementarity roles, AI skill demand actually correlates with fewer total jobs. For HR leaders, this is an actionable signal. Only 39 percent of companies using AI in HR provide formal training to employees working with those tools (SHRM 2026). The $5.5 trillion enterprise skills gap isn't a future problem — it's already showing up in your workforce's readiness to compete. We cover what the IMF's two-track policy framework means for your reskilling strategy, why the middle tier is the blind spot most HR programs miss, and how to audit your workforce against the AI complementarity spectrum before headcount decisions get made for you.

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episode AI Is Splitting the Job Market in Two — The IMF Just Proved It cover

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The IMF's January 2026 research reveals something counterintuitive: AI is simultaneously creating better jobs and squeezing out an entire tier of the workforce. High-skilled workers are capturing wage premiums. Low-skilled workers are benefiting from increased consumption spending. But middle-skilled workers — your operations analysts, project coordinators, and administrative managers — are seeing zero statistically significant gains. This is job polarization, and it's accelerating. In this episode, we break down what the IMF's Staff Discussion Note found: one in ten job vacancies in advanced economies now requires new AI-era skills that command a 3 to 3.4 percent wage premium. And in cities where AI-skill demand rises, average wages across the board go up 2.3 percent. But that rising tide isn't reaching the middle — and in high-exposure, low-complementarity roles, AI skill demand actually correlates with fewer total jobs. For HR leaders, this is an actionable signal. Only 39 percent of companies using AI in HR provide formal training to employees working with those tools (SHRM 2026). The $5.5 trillion enterprise skills gap isn't a future problem — it's already showing up in your workforce's readiness to compete. We cover what the IMF's two-track policy framework means for your reskilling strategy, why the middle tier is the blind spot most HR programs miss, and how to audit your workforce against the AI complementarity spectrum before headcount decisions get made for you.

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