Y12W33VC The work of the future

Robots and AI will automate most existing jobs within a generation. The middle-class careers today's students are preparing for will largely cease to exist. You've probably heard this prediction in various forms. Over the last decade, it has been widely repeated and, on the current evidence, mostly wrong — or wrong in the way it was framed. This week's article examines what's actually changing about work, honestly.

Core Vocabulary

automate

/ˈɔːtəmeɪt/|au·to·mate

verb | [base – past – past participle]

perform by machine

Word Breakdown: auto- (self) + mate (make)

Word family: automation (n.)

Synonyms: mechanize, robotize, self-operate

Collocations: automate tasks, automate processes

In the articleRobots and artificial intelligence will automate most existing jobs within a generation.

displace

/dɪsˈpleɪs/|dis·place

verb | [base – past – past participle]

take the place of

Word Breakdown: dis- (apart) + place

Word family: displacement (n.)

Synonyms: replace, remove, shift

Collocations: displace workers, labor displacement

In the articleThe fear that technology will displace workers entirely is as old as the industrial revolution.

polarise

/ˈpoʊləraɪz/|po·lar·ise

verb | [base – past – past participle]

divide into extremes

Word Breakdown: pol- (pole) + -ise (to make)

Word family: polarization (n.)

Synonyms: divide, split, separate

Collocations: job polarization, polarize opinion

In the articleThe labour market has polarised: employment has grown at the top (high-skill, high-pay) and the bottom (low-skill, low-pay), but hollowed out in the middle.

pervasive

/pərˈveɪsɪv/|per·va·sive

adjective

spreading throughout

Word Breakdown: per- (through) + -vasive (spreading)

Word family: pervade (n.)

Synonyms: widespread, ubiquitous, endemic

Collocations: pervasive problem, pervasive influence

In the articleWhat is different about digital automation is how pervasive it is — it can reach into cognitive and service work that previous technologies could not touch.

disruptive

/dɪsˈrʌptɪv/|dis·rup·tive

adjective

causing substantial change

Word Breakdown: dis- (apart) + -ruptive (breaking)

Word family: disrupt (n.)

Synonyms: destabilizing, transformative, radical

Collocations: disruptive technology, disruptive change

In the articleThe disruptive effects of automation are not distributed evenly across workers, firms, or regions.

complementary

/ˌkɑːmpləˈmentəri/|com·ple·men·tar·y

adjective

working alongside and enhancing

Word Breakdown: complem- (complete) + -entary (relating to)

Word family: complement (n.)

Synonyms: supporting, supplementary, auxiliary

Collocations: complementary skills, complementary tools

In the articleComplementary technologies make human workers more productive, increasing the value they produce without eliminating their role.

obsolete

/ˈɑːbsəliːt/|ob·so·lete

adjective

no longer useful

Word Breakdown: ob- (against) + -solete (accustomed)

Word family: obsolescence (n.)

Synonyms: outdated, outmoded, antiquated

Collocations: become obsolete, obsolete technology

In the articleEither society will figure out a radical solution — universal basic income, massive retraining, entirely new economic arrangements — or large portions

longitudinal

/ˌlɑːndʒɪˈtuːdɪnəl/|lon·gi·tu·di·nal

adjective

following a group over time

Word Breakdown: longitud- (length) + -inal (relating to)

Word family: longitude (n.)

Synonyms: lengthwise, extended, sustained

Collocations: longitudinal study, longitudinal research

In the articleLongitudinal studies tracking the same workers over time show that displacement effects are real and persistent for older workers.

Technical Terms

job polarisation

/dʒɒb ˌpəʊlərəˈzeɪʃən/|job po·lar·i·sa·tion

noun

Autor's finding that middle-skill work erodes while both high-skill and low-skill work persist

Synonyms: related concept, similar principle

Example: This term describes an important economic principle.

In the articleSome tasks become automated; other tasks within the same job remain, or expand in importance.

routine task hypothesis

/ruːˈtiːn tɑːsk haɪˈpɒθɪsɪs/|rou·tine task hy·poth·e·sis

noun

the theory that automation affects tasks that are routine more than tasks that aren't

Synonyms: related concept, similar principle

Example: This term describes an important economic principle.

In the articleHis broader finding, across several decades of labour-market research, is that technological change has historically produced job polarisation rather

skill-biased technical change

/skɪl ˈbaɪəst ˈteknɪkəl tʃeɪndʒ/|skill-bi·ased tech·ni·cal change

noun

technology increasing demand for higher-skill workers

Synonyms: related concept, similar principle

Example: This term describes an important economic principle.

In the articleSkills that combine human judgement with technical capability have held their value.

complementary AI

/ˌkɑːmpləˈmentəri/|com·ple·men·tar·y

noun

the use of AI to enhance rather than replace human work

Synonyms: related concept, similar principle

Example: This term describes an important economic principle.

In the articleComplementary technologies make human workers more productive, increasing the value they produce without eliminating their role.

labour market segmentation

/ˈleɪbər ˈmɑːkɪt ˌseɡmenˈteɪʃən/|la·bour mar·ket seg·men·ta·tion

noun

the division of jobs into categories with different dynamics

Synonyms: related concept, similar principle

Example: This term describes an important economic principle.

In the articleWhat's actually happening in the labour market is more complex, more interesting, and arguably more important to understand honestly.

Figurative Phrases

pull the rug out

remove support suddenly — idiom; no literal rug

Etymology/Type: Idiom from physical disruption; pulling a rug from under someone causes them to lose their footing and fall - applied to suddenly removing support or opportunity.

Synonyms: remove support suddenly, withdraw unexpectedly, leave someone without warning

Example: The funding was pulled out from under the program just as it had gained momentum — a decision that left the team scrambling.

In the articleThe displaced middle-skill workers have often moved into expanded low-skill service work, at lower wages, rather than being lifted into higher-skilled, higher-paid work.

left behind

unable to adapt to change — idiom; 'left' figurative

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from physical movement and abandonment; objects or people "left behind" are abandoned during forward movement - applied to inability to adapt to change.

Synonyms: left out of progress, unable to keep up, passed over by change

Example: Workers without digital skills risked being left behind as more tasks shifted to automated systems.

In the articleEither society will figure out a radical solution — universal basic income, massive retraining, entirely new economic arrangements — or large portions

the march of progress

inevitable advance — idiom; no literal marching

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from military movement; progress "marches" like an army in orderly, inevitable advance - suggesting change is unstoppable and organized.

Synonyms: the advance of change, the forward momentum of technology, the tide of progress

Example: Some feared that the march of progress would eliminate certain occupations before workers had time to retrain.

In the articleHere's a prediction you've probably encountered, in various forms, across the last decade.

the jobs of the future

unspecified future work — idiom; specific rhetorical resonance

Etymology/Type: Idiomatic construction used in political and economic rhetoric; refers to unspecified or emerging forms of employment not yet clearly defined.

Synonyms: future occupations, tomorrow's roles, the careers ahead

Example: The seminar on the jobs of the future left her uncertain about which skills to invest in, but clearer that adaptability mattered most.

In the articleHere's a prediction you've probably encountered, in various forms, across the last decade.

retrain from scratch

start over in new skills — idiom; 'scratch' no literal meaning here

Etymology/Type: Idiom from racing and starting points; the "scratch line" is where races begin - "from scratch" means starting completely over with new skills and training.

Synonyms: start again from the beginning, begin a new skill set from zero, rebuild your skills entirely

Example: At forty-five, he was retraining from scratch in data analysis — and finding it harder than he'd expected.

In the articleWhat the research actually shows The most influential pessimistic estimate came from a 2013 paper by two Oxford researchers, Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne, who estimated that 47 per cent of US jobs were at high risk of automation within about two decades.

keep up with the times

stay current — idiom; 'keep up' figurative

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from physical pace and movement; "keep up" equals maintain pace with forward movement - applied to staying current with rapid change.

Synonyms: stay current, adapt to change, remain relevant

Example: She updated her digital skills deliberately each year, determined to keep up with the times rather than be overtaken by them.

In the articleThe specific content of what you've learned by age twenty-two will matter less over a career than the capacity to keep learning new things as the worl

Confusing Words

automate vs automatic

These words stem from the same root but occupy different grammatical roles: automate is a verb (to make automatic), automatic is an adjective (happening without external control).

  • Automate (verb) means to convert to automatic operation — 'factories automate production to reduce costs.'
  • Automatic (adjective) describes something happening without external control — 'automatic systems require no human intervention.'

Grammar test: Automate is a verb (requires an object); automatic is an adjective (describes nouns or states).

displace vs replace

While both involve substitution, displacement is forced movement from position, while replacement is deliberate substitution of one thing for another.

  • Displace means to force out of position — 'new technologies displace workers from traditional jobs.'
  • Replace means to put something new in the place of something old — 'new technologies replace old systems with better ones.'

Evaluation test: Displace suggests loss or harm; replace is neutral about substitution.

pervasive vs persuasive

These homophones are phonetically similar but semantically opposite: pervasive means widespread, persuasive means convincing.

  • Pervasive means spread throughout or present everywhere — 'inequality is pervasive in modern economies.'
  • Persuasive means effective at convincing — 'Smith's argument is persuasive because it explains coordination.'

Pronunciation test: perVAsive = 'everywhere'; perSUAsive = 'convincing argument.'