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Fed Reserve on workforce planning implications in new tech world

February 26, 2026
in Human Resources
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Fed Reserve on workforce planning implications in new tech world
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Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr delivered an assessment of artificial intelligence and the labor market recently, outlining three possible economic futures and issuing an early warning that may resonate with HR leaders managing workforce strategy today.

Speaking Feb. 17 before the New York Association for Business Economics, Barr, a financial regulation expert with academic credentials, framed generative AI as a likely general-purpose technology. He compared it to the steam engine or electricity, capable of reshaping not just how work gets done but who does it.

“In addition to the likelihood that AI becomes a general-purpose technology, it may also become an ‘invention in the method of invention,’ ” he said. “Something that increases the efficiency of research and development and thus drives further innovation and the attendant benefits.”

3 scenarios HR leaders need to know

Barr described three “stylized scenarios,” saying that facts on the ground may play out differently or that different scenarios could hit segments of the economy. “But a scenario-based approach helps ground our thinking about these potential outcomes,” he explained.

Gradual adoption

The first and most likely near-term path is gradual adoption, where AI diffuses like previous technological advances, displacing some roles while creating others. Unemployment might tick up temporarily due to skill mismatch, but education and training adjust over time. It’s disruptive but manageable.

‘Jobless boom’

The second scenario is the one that should command HR’s attention. Barr calls this a rapid “jobless boom” in which AI agents replace professional and service roles at scale, autonomous vehicles and robotics hollow out transportation and manufacturing, and a large share of the population becomes, in Barr’s words, “essentially unemployable.” The result would demand a rethinking of workforce development, the social safety net and the distribution of economic gains.

A bust

The third scenario involves AI hitting a ceiling, with stalled adoption and financial stress resembling the dot-com bust. This represents a greater risk to investors and tech business leaders than to HR practitioners, but worth monitoring.

Barr made clear where he thinks things stand today: “So far, however, research seems to be more consistent with scenario one.”

Read more: AI and HR transformation at UPS

The early warning sign HR leaders can act on now

That relative reassurance comes with a significant caveat. Research already shows measurable harm to a specific cohort: early-career workers in AI-exposed fields. Barr cited a study using ADP payroll data, finding that “early-career workers in occupations highly exposed to AI, such as software developers and customer service representatives, have experienced a decline in employment relative to other early-career workers in less exposed fields.”

The implications extend beyond hiring. Barr noted that entering a weak labor market carries persistently adverse effects on earnings over time, adding that “for these workers, the short run may have long-term consequences.”

What the data says about how companies are responding

Barr pointed to a New York Fed survey showing that while some AI-adopting firms have reduced hiring or made limited layoffs, a much larger share plans to retrain their existing workforce. This suggests that talent development strategy, not headcount reduction, is where most organizations are placing their bets right now.

Still, he was candid about his thoughts on how similar bets have played out in the past. “The historical record on meaningful efforts to help workers in such a transition is not encouraging,” he said.

“Society will need to be nimble and bold to reduce the pain of short-term dislocations for workers,” Barr said, “and to ensure that the benefits are broadly shared.”

For HR leaders, that’s not an abstract policy argument. The reality is that they will likely need to build the retraining infrastructure, monitor where early-career workers are being squeezed out and begin planning for structural workforce shifts before the pace of AI adoption outstrips the ability to respond.

Worker reality check

While firms bet on retraining, ResumeTemplates.com surveys reveal mounting AI-job tensions: One in eight managers deem Gen Z “unemployable” and pivot to AI hires, while 73% of AI users are overly reliant on chatbots, even for basic emails.

Barr’s call for “nimble” workforce strategies hits home. HR leaders should prioritize Gen Z upskilling in AI-exposed roles to stem this shift before it accelerates.​


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