Showing posts with label artificial intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artificial intelligence. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Artificial intelligence meets the Pope

 

AI meets the Pope

Workers matter

 

Gordon L. Weil

Last week, Pope Leo XIV issued his first encyclical, the highest expression of religious thought by the head of the Roman Catholic Church.

He takes on the growing issues around artificial intelligence, especially its effect on labor and human values. 

AI will reduce or eliminate much human work, indifferent to its social, economic and personal implications.  Leo’s statement may be the most comprehensive analysis of the deep-seated problems that AI is creating.

He recognizes that AI can change the amount and nature of employment.  “It is certainly desirable for technology to relieve humans of arduous, repetitive or dangerous tasks and to provide intelligent support for human activity. Yet, the protection of employment opportunities and the irreplaceable role of the individual must remain the general rule,” he wrote.

Referring to a statement of the American bishops, he noted, “work is not merely a source of income but a crucial sphere in which identity is formed, friendships and relationships are forged, practical responsibilities are learned and one’s vocation is discerned.”

Past events from the Industrial Revolution to mass production forced individuals to make difficult transitions to new economies.   Leo is not a Luddite; he does not advocate keeping dying occupations alive to safeguard jobs. 

New jobs are developing, and, instead of entirely leaving adjustment to individuals, the pope seeks a greater role for government in continually providing training to allow the workforce to develop and meet new and more complex demands.

When too much emphasis is given to profits and efficiency, individuals can become objects rather than subjects in the economy.  Leo makes it clear that AI will never be able to duplicate humanity because it relies on data and not each person’s human condition and experience.  Economic success is not enough.   AI must fit into a picture of human needs and abilities.  

AI should bring greater efficiency and productivity.  That will mean more effective use of time, requiring higher skill levels.   Just as the assembly line reduced the number or workers and the length of the work week to produce autos, AI raises the need to reexamine what constitutes full-time work.

The eight-hour day and 40-hour week have a long history, growing out of labor demands and economic needs in the Nineteenth Century.  They became American law in 1937, setting a national standard for the required payment of overtime wages.

The work week gradually declined to that point as technical developments reduced the need for manual labor and unions effectively organized.  Forty hours was a political decision and was not based on any study of productivity or worker efficiency.

A new look at labor and leisure is overdue, and AI will force the issue.  The variables are in hours, vacations and holidays.  Even today, the U.S. is far out of step with the rest of the developed world.

According to the International Labor Organization, a UN agency, and other sources, here are some comparisons:

                                    Hours/workweek                     Paid vacation/holidays                        

            U.S.                 36.27                                       0                                

            Canada            31.86                                       17-33              

            U.K.                 31.17                                       28-30

            France             30.76                                       35

            Germany         29.66                                       30

            Denmark         28.91                                       35-40

            Netherlands     26.57                                       28

 

One reason why workweeks fall below 40 hours is the presence of part-time workers. The length of the average workweek in the U.S. has steadily declined. Paid days-off in other countries are required by law; there is no requirement in U.S. law.

 

Even without taking into account the impact of AI and technology, the U.S. could align better with other countries.   Employers could be required to give paid time off.   Now, when new federal holidays are added, they usually produce little benefit to workers other than those employed by government.

By itself, this change would contribute to easing employment reduction resulting from AI.  It would be resisted by some businesses, but the tax system could compel compliance.

The coming needs of the economy should begin to be identified rather than being left to emerge later.

The reduction in the number of required hours of work annually would contribute to the growth of the entertainment and recreation sectors.   More public and low-cost facilities will be needed, financed by fees and admissions.  This widely distributed development will create new needs for labor.

Not only will these sectors create new jobs, especially at the entry level, but they will respond to the growth in leisure time.     Government will need to assume a greater responsibility in encouraging or offering options in these sectors.

Another sector that now demands increased labor, also often at the entry level, is elder care.  The American population is aging, creating the need for more care facilities.  This has been an entry point to the economy for recent immigrants.  A more systematic response is needed.

AI need not be seen as a threat to workers, but it must be understood as requiring a new economic and social revolution.