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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
Federal judges have declined to grant injunctions sought by DoorDash, Uber, and Instacart to block new New York City laws that require food delivery apps to offer customers the option to tip workers. U.S. District Judge George Daniels said the laws "advance the city's goals of enhancing cost transparency" and protecting delivery workers, while also rejecting Instacart's claim regarding state legislation prohibiting such mandates. The companies, which contend that the tipping requirements may harm their business, plan to appeal the decisions. DoorDash has voiced concerns about "tipping fatigue" among customers.
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Human Times
UK
EY global vice chair Julie Teigland has told Reuters that firms are learning that artificial intelligence is not plug-and-play, and ROI requires organisational redesign and training, not just the deployment of tools. She cited work by EY indicating that intensive training can be linked to productivity improvements, observing that around 81 hours of training per employee could translate into roughly 14% weekly productivity gains, in concert with role redesign. AI's labour impact will be "multi-generational," changing entry-level positions and routine white-collar tasks, Teigland said, with employees needing to shift from "doing the task to supervising the task," and becoming "above the loop."
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Human Times
Europe
The UK is losing more jobs than it is creating because of artificial intelligence, and at a faster rate than international peers, according to research by Morgan Stanley. UK companies reported that AI led to 8% net job losses over the past 12 months, the study found. This was the highest level in a group that included German, American, Japanese and Australian companies, and twice the international average. British firms reported an average 11.5% productivity increase due to the adoption of AI; almost half experienced even greater boosts.
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Human Times
Middle East
Ahmad Al-Rajhi, Saudi Arabia's Minister of Human Resources and Social Development, has highlighted expected growth in tech-centric roles, such as AI specialists and data analysts, during the third Global Labor Market Conference in Riyadh. He noted that traditional positions including data entry may decline, and also emphasised the importance of continuous upskilling to keep pace with rapid technological changes and the need for coordinated action to address global youth employment challenges. “More than 262m young people worldwide are not in employment, education or training in many regions, and job creation is not keeping pace with population growth, while other countries are facing the pressure of aging workforces and rising dependency ratios,” Al-Rajhi observed.
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