Elon Musk predicts work will be optional by 2045 due to AI, robotics

WASHINGTON, D.C., UNITED STATES – Tesla Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Elon Musk predicts that technological advancements will render traditional employment voluntary within the next 10 to 20 years.
Speaking at the United States-Saudi Investment Forum, Musk outlined a future in which widespread automation and artificial intelligence (AI) provide for all goods and services, suggesting that a system of “universal high income” would support a work-optional society.
“My prediction is that work will be optional,” Musk said.
Musk foresees decades of technological disruption
Musk envisions millions of robots entering the workforce, driving productivity to such heights that human labor is no longer a necessity for economic output.
He has claimed that 80% of the company’s value will ultimately be generated by its Optimus humanoid robots, even though the robots have experienced production delays.
Musk broadens this vision of the automated future to resemble the post-scarcity worlds of Iain Banks’s science fiction novels, in which even money becomes unnecessary.
Nevertheless, economists cite technological shifts that would complicate Musk’s ambitious schedule. Although the cost of AI is decreasing, with one platform recording a 10 to 2.50 per 1 million tokens price reduction in a year, it is still very costly and not easily scalable, in contrast to physical robotics.
“We’ve been at it making machines forever, since the industrial revolution, at scale,” Ioana Marinescu, an economist and Associate Professor of Public Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, told Fortune.
In response to the question of whether robotics technology will be superseded by newer AI software, Marinescu noted, “We know from economics that you often run—for these kinds of activities—into decreasing returns, as it gets harder in order to make progress in a line of technology that you’ve been at, in this case, for a couple of centuries.”
Also, a Yale Budget Lab report found that, despite the hype surrounding AI, the overall labor market has not yet seen a discernible disturbance from AI automation, suggesting it might be adopted more slowly than expected.
‘Universal high income’ and a post-work economy
Musk’s forecast shows the need for a fundamental restructuring of economic and social systems to accommodate a work-optional population. Musk has proposed a “universal high income” as a solution to sustain a population freed from necessary labor.
Samuel Solomon, an Assistant Professor of Labor Economics at Temple University, told Fortune, “AI has already created so much wealth and will continue to.”
“But I think one key question is: Is this going to be inclusive? Will it create inclusive prosperity? Will it create inclusive growth? Will everyone benefit?” he added.
The political and distributive challenges of such a system, however, are profound. Solomon highlighted that the political will to implement a universal income is just as critical as the technology itself.
Current trends suggest an AI-driven wealth concentration, with one chief economist noting that the wealthy’s surging stock portfolios are now a key driver of growth.
Additionally, Anton Korinek, professor and faculty director of the Economics of Transformative AI Initiative at the University of Virginia, told Fortune that “if the economic value of labor declines so that labor is just not very useful anymore, we’ll have to rethink how our society is structured.”
While Musk’s prediction captures the transformative potential of AI and robotics, its realization ultimately hinges on a daunting socioeconomic reorganization that must first solve the profound political and distributive challenges of a post-labor world.

Independent




