Lower-skilled workers could earn more in an AI world, research indicates

July 2026 · 4 minute read
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For anyone worried about AI's effects on jobs, here's good news: New research by Stanford economist Lukas Althoff concludes that artificial intelligence is likely to reshape jobs rather than eliminate entire occupations and will ultimately increase wages for all workers—with the biggest gains benefiting lower-skilled workers.

The reason, according to Althoff's study, is that AI will simplify many job tasks. By reducing the skills required to perform specific tasks, AI will enable lower-skilled workers to take on higher-paying roles. His estimates suggest that, over a lifetime, these workers stand to earn 15% to 45% more than they would without AI's support. Depending on how rapidly AI advances, these gains to lower-skilled workers could be even higher.

If so, AI's workplace impact will be to narrow the wage gap between the highest and lowest earners, a gap that has been growing and that many fear will continue to worsen in an AI world.

Althoff's analysis, released as a working paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research, is based on a novel framework he developed with Hugo Reichardt of the Barcelona School of Economics that introduces a new way of understanding how technological change affects workers.

Unlike previous models that focused primarily on automation or augmentation—where machines either replace human workers entirely or help them become more productive—Althoff and Reichardt identify "simplification" as a key outcome of technological change.

While all workers stand to benefit as AI streamlines tasks, lower-skilled workers will gain the most as their wages rise faster than those of other workers, Althoff and Reichardt say. Other research has also found that AI is helping lower-skilled workers become more productive in their jobs faster than it is helping higher-skilled employees.

Althoff says there's already evidence that AI is leveling the playing field. He points to the growing number of solo entrepreneurs in the U.S. and the recent case of an 18-year-old high school student in California who received an informal job offer from NASA after he identified 1.5 million previously unknown objects in space from his laptop.

"Our research highlights the more optimistic case for AI's impact on labor market inequality," Althoff says. He is an assistant professor of economics in the Stanford School of Humanities and Sciences and a faculty fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research.

According to Althoff, the research differs from many other studies to date on AI's job impacts, which have focused on the types of jobs that are most exposed to—or at risk of—disruption. But the actual harms to workers in exposed jobs depend on whether AI automates, accelerates or simplifies tasks that they were already good at or had not yet mastered, he says.

"Our paper translates these now-standard measures of AI exposure into meaningful wage and employment impacts for each individual in the economy, taking into account a worker's different strengths and weaknesses, their ability to learn new skills and transition to other occupations, and economy-wide changes like changing demands for goods and services," Althoff says.

The result, he says, "is a set of more disciplined predictions about the AI economy."

Using their framework, Althoff and Reichardt uncover other insights. Among them:

More information

Lukas Althoff et al, Task-Specific Technical Change and Comparative Advantage, National Bureau of Economic Research (2026). DOI: 10.3386/w35353

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Sadie Harley

Sadie Harley

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Andrew Zinin

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Citation: Lower-skilled workers could earn more in an AI world, research indicates (2026, July 14) retrieved 14 July 2026 from https://phys.org/news/2026-07-skilled-workers-ai-world.html

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