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Morgan Stanley Says AI Will Not Let You Retire Early, But Will Force You to Train for Jobs That Do Not Exist Yet

While tech leaders predict mass white-collar job losses, Morgan Stanley argues AI will not make work optional. Instead, it will force workers to retrain for entirely new roles that are only beginning to emerge.

Featured InsightsbyFeatured Insights
February 27, 2026
in Career Growth
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Morgan Stanley Says AI Will Not Let You Retire Early, But Will Force You to Train for Jobs That Do Not Exist Yet

A new cross-asset report from Morgan Stanley delivers a calmer message to worried workers and markets: You likely wonโ€™t be permanently unemployed โ€” youโ€™ll move into new jobs, many that do not yet exist.

Tech titans and stock market investors are increasingly unified in their forecast that artificial intelligence will permanently eliminate millions of white-collar jobs and render traditional employment obsolete.

Software and services stocks have taken a beating, with software multiples pulling back by roughly 33% since late 2025 as investors fret over AIโ€™s potential to automate vast swaths of knowledge work. Earlier this year, Elon Musk predicted that AI and humanoid robots will make work completely โ€œoptionalโ€ within the next 10 to 20 years, ushering in a post-scarcity economy where money itself becomes irrelevant. He joins a growing chorus of tech executives issuing stark warnings about human obsolescence; OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently cautioned that superintelligence could soon outperform even top corporate executives, while Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei have projected that sweeping white-collar automation could arrive in one to five years. Economists remain skeptical of the timeline, noting that the apocalyptic narrative may be as much a tool to justify astronomical tech valuations as it is an impending economic reality.

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But a new, cross-asset research report from Morgan Stanley offers a remarkably grounding message for anxious employees and jittery markets: Most of you wonโ€™t be permanently unemployed; you are just going to find new jobs, many or most of which donโ€™t exist yet.

Addressing the widespread concern that AI will โ€œreplace millions of jobs and increase unemployment by an equivalent amount,โ€ a large team of Morgan Stanley analysts pointed directly to history. Over the past 150 years, sweeping technological shiftsโ€”from electrification and the tractor to the computer and the internetโ€”have fundamentally altered the labor force, but they โ€œdid not replace labor.โ€

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When the spreadsheet was popularized in the 1980s, for example, it automated tedious financial modeling and reduced the need for certain bookkeeping clerks. However, it simultaneously freed up analystsโ€™ time to do more complex work and birthed entirely new financial professions. Similarly, the firm argues, AI will merely change โ€œjob types, occupations, and needed skills.โ€

โ€œWhile some roles may be automated, others will see enhancement through AI augmentation, and other, entirely new roles will be created,โ€ the report said. Rather than a mass extinction event for the white-collar worker, the bank sees the corporate landscape simply preparing for an evolution.

The jobs to come?

So, what will these new jobs look like? Morgan Stanley outlines several emerging professions that it predicts will soon become corporate staples. As AI becomes central to business strategy, companies are expected to hire executive-level โ€œchief AI officersโ€ to guide technology adoption across departments. There will also be a massive surge in AI governance roles focused on data compliance, policy oversight, and information security, particularly in sensitive sectors like health care.

The tech sector could see the rise of blended roles, such as the product manager/engineer hybrid. Empowered by natural language coding tools, product managers will increasingly engage in โ€œvibe codingโ€โ€”prototyping and iterating concepts themselves before handing them off to engineers for deployment.

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Highly specialized roles could also emerge across various industries. In the consumer sector, โ€œAI personalization strategistsโ€ and โ€œAI supply-chain analystsโ€ will blend data science with customer experience. In industrials, we will see โ€œpredictive maintenance engineersโ€ and โ€œsmart grid analysts,โ€ while health care will demand โ€œcomputational geneticistsโ€ and specialists dedicated to AI diagnostic oversight.

For financial markets, the current panic over AI disruption appears premature, if not entirely misplaced, in the bankโ€™s view. Morgan Stanley notes that the services and cyclical industries that have recently seen outsize underperformance owing to disruption fears make up only about 13% of the S&P 500โ€™s market cap.

Fortune previously reported on a similar finding from other Wall Street economists: The market appears to be talking itself into a panic that the fundamentals donโ€™t justify, a trend likely exacerbated by the increasing number of retail investors in the equities market. Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Slok warned on Wednesday that the โ€œentire market [is] exposed to a big move,โ€ reasoning that the share of S&P 500 names moving more than 10% in a single day has increased, while options activity remains โ€œextremely elevated, consistent with heavy retail speculation and leverage-like exposure.โ€ This leaves the market structure โ€œmore fragile and more vulnerable to an abrupt, outsized move.โ€

But what if this time is different?

The Morgan Stanley report offers welcome reassuranceโ€”but it may be telling a comforting story that doesnโ€™t fit the technological and economic realities of 2026. While itโ€™s true that past waves of automation created as many jobs as they destroyed, AI may represent a qualitatively different shift, targeting cognitive, creative, and decision-making tasks once thought immune to automation.

In a new paper released the same day, two Nobel-winning economists (Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson) and another, massively influential one (David Autor, known for his work on โ€œThe China Shockโ€) argued that this time really could be different. In โ€œBuilding Pro-Worker Artificial Intelligence,โ€ published by the Hamilton Project, they warned that โ€œpure automation technologiesโ€ do the opposite of collaborating with workers: โ€œThey commodify human expertise, rendering it less valuable and potentially superfluous.โ€ The specific stock of specialized, human expertise could become โ€œobsoleteโ€ with wide deployment of such technology.

While the Morgan Stanley thesis reflects historical optimism, historyโ€™s lessons may not apply cleanly in a situation with a shift from tools that amplify labor to systems that replace cognition. As warned in the speculative essay by Citrini Research, AI could produce productivity gains that decouple corporate profits from employment even more than in the computing era. If firms can scale output with largely automated workforces, they would have little incentive to rehire at historic rates.

Morgan Stanley cites evidence that corporate America is already reaping tangible rewards from AI adoption. By the fourth quarter of 2025, 30% of companies identified as AI โ€œadoptersโ€ reported quantifiable financial or productivity benefits from the technology, up from just 16% a year prior. As a result, forward profit margin expectations are actively accelerating for companies successfully utilizing AI. How those margins continue to increase, and how many new jobs those companies create as a result, will bear out whether Morgan Stanleyโ€™s prediction is right.

Written by Nick Lichtenberg for Fortune as โ€œMorgan Stanley predicts AI wonโ€™t let you retire early: Instead, youโ€™ll have to train for jobs that donโ€™t exist yetโ€ and republished with permission.

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Articles under Featured Insights are sourced from leading publications such as Fortune, offered through our collaboration with Reuters. Each piece is hand-selected to provide valuable perspectives and exceptional journalism to keep you informed on the trends shaping the future of work. If you would also like to be considered for syndication on Allwork.Space, please contact us.

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