NOMINATED FOR THE FT & McKINSEY BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARDS 2020- a brilliant analysis of the future of work in the age of AI
Daniel Susskind is a Fellow in Economics at Balliol College, Oxford, and the coauthor of The Future of Professions, named as one of the best books of the year by the Financial Times, New Scientist and the Times Literary Supplement. Previously, he worked in the British Government - as a policy adviser in the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit, as a policy analyst in the Policy Unit in 10 Downing Street, and as a senior policy adviser in the Cabinet Office.
Compelling ... Thought-provoking ... Should be
required reading for any presidential candidate thinking
about the economy of the future. * New York Times *
An excellent and timely piece of analysis ... Susskind
combines a mastery of global research with insight into how
government works. A book of immense importance that demands to
be taken very seriously by No. 10, and by anyone who cares
about the future of our country and world. * New Statesman *
A pathbreaking, thought-provoking, and in-depth study of how
new technology will transform the world of work. * The Right
Honourable Gordon Brown *
A fascinating book about a vitally important topic -
and he writes with such elegance that you don't even notice how
much you're learning. Elegant, original and compelling. --
Tim Harford, author of 'Fifty Things That Made The Modern Economy'
and 'The Undercover Economist'
A superb and sophisticated contribution to the debate over
work in the age of artificial intelligence. Susskind approaches the
debate with a great command of the evidence and with excellent
judgment. He takes on all of the major debates: whether new
jobs will replace those that disappear, how the income distribution
will be affected, and how individuals are likely to allocate their
time in the future between work, leisure, study, and other
activities. Never glib, consistently wise and well-informed,
this is the book to read to understand how digital technologies and
artificial intelligence in particular are reshaping the economy and
labor market, and how we will live alongside increasingly smart
machines. -- Jeffrey D. Sachs, Professor of Economics at Columbia
University, Director of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions
Network
Daniel Susskind has written an important book on an equally
important topic: the future of work in an economy driven by the
advances in artificial intelligence. His conclusion is that
ultimately there will be less work, or at least less paid work.
This will shake the foundations of our economy and our society. Our
institutions will have to be transformed. It will be a daunting
challenge. We have to start thinking hard about it now. --
Martin Wolf * Chief Economics Commentator, 'The Financial Times'
*
This is the book to read on the future of work in the age of
artificial intelligence. It is thoughtful and state-of-the-art
on the economics of the issue, but its real strength is the way
it goes beyond just the economics. A truly important
contribution that deserves widespread consideration. --
Lawrence Summers, former Chief Economist of the World Bank,
Treasury Secretary for the Clinton Administration and Director of
the National Economic Council for the Obama Administration
Eloquent and humane, A World Without Work moves the
debate beyond the illusion that technology always creates more jobs
than it destroys and provocatively explores the role of work in
human life and what to do when that role evaporates. -- Stuart
Russell, author of 'Human Compatible' and Professor of Computer
Science at the University of California, Berkeley
Fascinating and tightly argued * Sunday Telegraph *
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