The Guardian (Nigeria)

MIT claims human labour is cheaper than AI

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

MASSACHUSE­TTS Institute of Technology ( MIT) has revealed that it is still cheaper to use humans for certain jobs than artificial intelligen­ce ( AI).

In a study addressing fears about AI replacing humans in various industries, MIT establishe­d that using AI to replace humans is only profitable in a few industries.

This is coming amid concerns that AI will replace many jobs currently handled by humans. The report suggests that AI cannot replace most jobs in cost- effective ways at present.

Already, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) has said that almost 40 per cent of jobs across the globe will be influenced by AI, projecting that advanced economies are expected to experience a higher impact compared to emerging markets and low- income nations.

In a blog post, IMF chief, Kristalina Georgieva, called for government­s to establish social safety nets and offer retraining programmes to counter the impact of AI.

But MIT explained that the cost- benefit ratio of computer vision is most favourable in segments like retail, transporta­tion, and warehousin­g— areas where Walmart Inc. and Amazon. com Inc. are prominent— and in the healthcare context.

It said computer vision is a field of AI that enables machines to derive meaningful informatio­n from digital images and other visual inputs, with its most ubiquitous applicatio­ns showing up in object detection systems for autonomous driving or in helping categorize photos on smartphone­s.

Giving further insights, MIT researcher­s said they found that AI could effectivel­y supplant only 23 per cent of workers, measured in terms of dollar wages.

In other cases, because AI- assisted visual recognitio­n is expensive to install and operate, humans did the job more economical­ly.

“Machines will steal our jobs” is a sentiment frequently expressed during times of rapid technologi­cal change. Such anxiety has re- emerged with the creation of large language models, said the researcher­s from MIT’S Computer Science and Artificial Intelligen­ce Laboratory in the 45- page paper titled “Beyond AI Exposure.”

“We find that only 23 per cent of worker compensati­on ‘ exposed’ to AI computer vision would be cost- effective for firms to automate because of the large upfront costs of AI systems.”

The study was funded by the MIT- IBM Watson AI Lab and used online surveys to collect data on about 1,000 visually assisted tasks across 800 occupation­s.

Only three per cent of such tasks can be automated cost- effectivel­y today, but that could rise to 40 per cent by 2030 if data costs fall and accuracy improves, the researcher­s said.

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