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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
A former Citigroup executive claims in a lawsuit that she was dismissed after raising regulatory and compliance questions. A source familiar with the case said the concerns involved a request to open a bank account connected to President Donald Trump. The heavily redacted complaint, filed in Brooklyn federal court, was filed anonymously, using the pseudonym Jane Doe. The plaintiff, a former managing director in Citi's wealth management division, claimed she had identified deficiencies in Citi's internal controls for risk management, anti-money laundering, reputation risk, and data compliance. Citigroup has denied the allegations in the lawsuit and said it had "absolutely zero merit."
Full Issue
Human Times
UK
AI is splitting the global labour market in two, according to a PwC study of data including over one billion job postings across 27 countries and territories. The technology is rewarding companies that use AI to enhance human skills, but those who use it merely to cut costs are being left behind, the study suggests. “The companies seeing the greatest returns on AI are using it to amplify human expertise, accelerate innovation and create entirely new sources of value,” observed Joe Atkinson, PwC’s global chief AI officer. “They’re pulling further ahead on productivity and growth than companies that focus primarily on automation.” Entry-level AI-exposed roles that require what have traditionally been senior human competencies, such as judgment, empathy, ethics, creativity and leadership, have grown 35% since 2019, while so-called “non-seniorised” entry-level positions, which don’t require such skills, have shrunk by 10%, PwC said.
Full Issue
Human Times
Europe
AI is splitting the global labour market in two, according to a PwC study of data including over one billion job postings across 27 countries and territories. The technology is rewarding companies that use AI to enhance human skills, but those who use it merely to cut costs are being left behind, the study suggests. “The companies seeing the greatest returns on AI are using it to amplify human expertise, accelerate innovation and create entirely new sources of value,” observed Joe Atkinson, PwC’s global chief AI officer. “They’re pulling further ahead on productivity and growth than companies that focus primarily on automation.” Entry-level AI-exposed roles that require what have traditionally been senior human competencies, such as judgment, empathy, ethics, creativity and leadership, have grown 35% since 2019, while so-called “non-seniorised” entry-level positions, which don’t require such skills, have shrunk by 10%, PwC said.
Human Times
Middle East
AI is splitting the global labour market in two, according to a PwC study of data including over 1bn job postings across 27 countries and territories. The technology is rewarding companies that use AI to enhance human skills, but those who use it merely to cut costs are being left behind, the study suggests. “The companies seeing the greatest returns on AI are using it to amplify human expertise, accelerate innovation and create entirely new sources of value,” observed Joe Atkinson, PwC’s global chief AI officer. “They’re pulling further ahead on productivity and growth than companies that focus primarily on automation.” Entry-level AI-exposed roles that require what have traditionally been senior human competencies, such as judgment, empathy, ethics, creativity and leadership, have grown 35% since 2019, while so-called “non-seniorised” entry-level positions, which don’t require such skills, have shrunk by 10%, PwC said.
Full Issue