AI disruption hits $4.5Tn, 93% of jobs at risk: Cognizant

NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES — Cognizant says artificial intelligence (AI) could disrupt $4.5 trillion in economic activity, putting 93% of United States jobs at risk, signaling a massive transformation for the workforce and outsourcing sector, according to the company’s New Work, New World 2026 report.
The firm’s own verdict on its previous projections is blunt: “The technology, in short, is affecting more jobs, faster, and to a greater extent than we anticipated.”
AI is moving six years ahead of schedule
Average AI exposure scores across all jobs now stand at 39% — 30% higher than the original forecast for 2032 — and are rising at 9% annually. The result, as Allwork.space noted, is that AI’s workforce impact has effectively been pulled forward by six years.
The research found that 30% of jobs could face an existential threat from AI, 15 percentage points higher than the initial assessment. In total, the report estimates AI-driven disruption could shift roughly $4.5 trillion in labour from humans to machines.
Multimodal AI, advanced reasoning models, and the emergence of agentic AI systems are cited as the primary drivers pushing exposure scores far beyond earlier projections.
That self-assessment carries unusual weight. Cognizant has reassessed its estimate of AI’s impact on the workplace.
The company employs roughly 350,000 people globally and generates revenue by delivering human-led IT and business process services. When a firm whose entire business model rests on human-delivered work concludes that AI has moved faster than expected, the finding is harder to dismiss than a think-tank projection.
The outsourcing paradox: Exposed but not replaced
The report’s headline figures should be read carefully in the outsourcing context. Being “AI-exposed” is not the same as being “AI-replaceable.”
Cognizant’s report reaffirms that human knowledge and judgment remain essential to harnessing AI’s full potential, emphasising that much of AI’s value potential remains untapped without human intelligence and involvement.
For the BPO and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) sectors, this distinction matters enormously.
Roles involving emotionally nuanced customer interactions, complex clinical documentation, multi-jurisdictional legal reasoning, and high-stakes financial analysis remain stubbornly resistant to full automation.
These are precisely the service lines driving premium growth in KPO, legal process outsourcing, and finance and accounting outsourcing. AI is reshaping how that work is done, not eliminating the need for it.
That said, sub-sectors built on repeatable, rules-based tasks face a sharper reckoning. Enterprises that have not begun integrating AI into their BPO workflows risk being caught flat-footed as clients restructure delivery models around AI-augmented teams.
Cognizant ranked #7 in the OA500 2025, Outsource Accelerator’s annual index of the world’s top 500 outsourcing firms.
For an industry already navigating rapid automation, Cognizant’s willingness to revise its own projections upward may be the clearest signal yet that standing still is no longer a viable strategy.

Independent




