The AI jobs debate just got messier
A new report finds "high-intensity AI adopters” saw headcount increase 10.2%. Among those companies, entry-level headcount rose by 12%, countering the rhetoric that AI kills junior jobs.
AI-related job loss fears grow each time another company announces a round of layoffs . Through May of 2026, companies announced that close to 90,000 job cuts were tied to AI, and, by some accounts, up to 15% of U.S. jobs are projected to be eliminated by AI over the next five years. Promises from the tech industry that AI will also create new jobs does little to ease fears, especially for the generation wondering if anyone will be hiring when they graduate.
A recent report from Ramp and Revelio Labs, which track enterprise AI spend and workforce records from nearly 22,000 companies, respectively, complicates that gloomy narrative.
The report found that companies spending heavily on AI are growing headcount faster, even in the entry-level roles that many fear are doomed. According to the report, “high-intensity adopters” — firms that spend on average $30 per employee per month on AI in the first three months — saw headcount increase 10.2%.
Headcount also rose across functions, including engineering , sales, administration, customer service, finance, marketing, and scientist roles. The strongest job growth among high-intensity adopters was in the information sector, which includes software, internet, media, and tech-adjacent firms.
Despite these positive signals, the data isn’t as rosy as it seems. It skews heavily towards tech-forward, knowledge-work firms — ones that might have VC-backing and are growing fast anyway, making it difficult to say whether AI is contributing to the hiring or just showing up at companies that are expanding anyway.
“This paper does not show that AI universally creates jobs,” the paper’s authors admit, “but it does counter claims that AI will lead to broad job losses.”
It also counters claims that AI is killing all junior jobs. Recent research from Goldman Sachs found that AI has already erased about 16,000 net jobs per month over the past year, with Gen Z and entry level workers taking the brunt of the burden. But in tech-forward firms, the report finds that entry-level headcount actually rose by 12%.
So what can we take away from this? Perhaps that AI isn’t always a tool for labor substitution, but that it can be a tool for firm-expansion instead.
“For software and technology firms, AI can make core output cheaper or faster to produce: writing code, debugging, building internal tools, producing technical documentation, and supporting product development,” the report reads. “Lower production costs in these workflows can raise the return to expanding the whole firm, not just the engineering team.”
But companies that buy subscriptions and run pilots, yet did not go on to make sustained investments, don’t tend to see any gains in headcount, per the report.
That sets up the potential for a widening gap between firms that have the resources — like capital, technical staff, founder networks, and management bandwidth — to turn AI adoption into actual business gains and those that are stuck experimenting with subscriptions. In other words, this report suggests that firms that already have the resources are the ones who will see the largest gains.
The paper’s authors speculate such a divide may continue to grow, saying: “Firms without those channels may fall behind.”
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Rebecca Bellan is a senior reporter at TechCrunch where she covers the business, policy, and emerging trends shaping artificial intelligence. Her work has also appeared in Forbes, Bloomberg, The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, and other publications.
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Pontos-chave
- Empresas que adotam IA intensivamente estão aumentando suas contratações, especialmente em cargos de entrada.
- O crescimento no emprego pode não ser representativo de todos os setores, refletindo uma desigualdade no mercado de trabalho.
- A formação e capacitação de novos profissionais devem alinhar-se às demandas do mercado impulsionadas pela IA.
Análise editorial
A discussão sobre o impacto da inteligência artificial (IA) no mercado de trabalho brasileiro ganha novas nuances com o recente relatório que aponta um crescimento no número de empregos em empresas que adotam a IA de forma intensiva. Para o setor de tecnologia no Brasil, que já enfrenta desafios como a escassez de mão de obra qualificada e a necessidade de inovação constante, essa evidência pode sinalizar uma oportunidade para a expansão de equipes, especialmente em startups e empresas de tecnologia que estão se adaptando rapidamente às novas ferramentas.
Entretanto, é crucial considerar que os dados apresentados no relatório refletem predominantemente o cenário de empresas com forte investimento em tecnologia, o que pode não ser representativo de todos os setores da economia brasileira. Muitas pequenas e médias empresas ainda enfrentam dificuldades para integrar a IA em seus processos, o que pode limitar sua capacidade de crescimento e contratação. Portanto, enquanto algumas empresas estão prosperando com a adoção de IA, outras podem ficar para trás, exacerbando as desigualdades no mercado de trabalho.
Além disso, o aumento de 12% nas contratações de cargos de entrada em empresas de alta intensidade de IA sugere que essas organizações estão investindo em formação e desenvolvimento de talentos, o que é um sinal positivo para a nova geração de profissionais. No entanto, é importante que as instituições de ensino e os programas de capacitação no Brasil se alinhem com essas demandas do mercado, preparando os jovens para as novas funções que estão surgindo.
O que observar a seguir é como as empresas brasileiras, especialmente fora do eixo tecnológico, irão responder a essa tendência. Será que elas conseguirão adotar a IA de maneira a também gerar empregos, ou a pressão por eficiência levará a cortes de pessoal? O futuro do trabalho no Brasil pode depender da capacidade do setor de tecnologia em liderar essa transformação, mas também da adaptação de outros setores à nova realidade impulsionada pela IA.
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- Enquadramento editorial sobre relevancia, impacto e proximos desdobramentos.
- Revisao de legibilidade, contexto e duplicacao antes da publicacao.
Fonte original:
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Este artigo foi curado e publicado pelo AIDaily como parte da nossa cobertura editorial sobre desenvolvimentos em inteligência artificial. O conteúdo é baseado na fonte original citada abaixo, enriquecido com contexto e análise editorial. Ferramentas automatizadas podem auxiliar tradução e estruturação inicial, mas a decisão de publicar, a revisão factual e o enquadramento de contexto seguem responsabilidade editorial.
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