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CrelbowMannschaft t1_jaa8u34 wrote

Economics education is a pyramid scheme. Finance is good, but companies look for math and physics majors over finance majors, because they need exceptionally strong math skills. If you can find an MBA program with a focus on entrepreneurship, that's probably your best related bet. If you can successfully start and run your own companies, you don't need to worry about a job. All you'd need, then, is a market.

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GoodAndBluts t1_jaa9ofw wrote

i dont have any advice - because nobody knows

Maybe you should ask ChatGPT

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AvgAIbot t1_jaaaona wrote

I would do healthcare, even though it could be automated, I’m sure doctors and medical staff will be protected by governments atleast in the short term. Finance though I don’t see any protections

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popupideas t1_jaac5zu wrote

Only advise I can recommend is stepping ahead of the ai issue and learn to use it to your advantage. It is just another tool. Calculators didn’t stop mathematicians. Just because a tool to improve them. I believe “ai” will too

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DandyDarkling t1_jaacxnb wrote

I’m in the same dilemma. I honestly feel it’s insoluble because no job is safe in the advent of AGI. Seems to me it’s less a matter of “if” and more a matter of “when”. Best bet is maybe starting your own business and utilizing AI as a tool in that business.

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nillouise t1_jaajnkl wrote

If you think AI will develop quickly, and maybe replace your job, isn't it a reasonable strategy not to go to school and save money to living? Or invest money to yourself (which never develop quickly like AI) and fail the game?

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YaAbsolyutnoNikto OP t1_jaajxfx wrote

Education is free in my country. I want to get a MSc to improve myself and learn more about the above topics, whilst getting job relevant skills - while they are still useful, at least.

Once I’m inevitably out of a job, I’ll still have the knowledge and achievement.

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GodG0AT t1_jaaokzw wrote

Tbh just do what you're the most interested in. AI will automate everything. Doesn't matter if it takes ur job a few years earlier or later.

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turnip_burrito t1_jaasfdp wrote

I don't think it's really worth worrying about. AI won't be able to do your job until AGI, and automation will be brittle and weak until then. By the time AGI rolls around, all information workers will lose their jobs almost simultaneously.

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nickiflips t1_jaax9o5 wrote

I would argue it does matter, regulators are always behind on these things. Better to be in one of the last jobs to be automated and avoid the mess of regulators learning how to properly alleviate disruptive pressures. Im sure during the industrial revolution people who adapted more quickly by either a) buying a tractor or b) quickly learning how to do a desk job were better off than those who resisted and still used mule-drawn plows for tilling their fields. Obviously more than just farming was impacted but I digress. (For context prior to the industrial revolution 80% of all people were farmers - today it is less than 1%)

tldr: don’t be the lesson be the end result

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PurpedSavage t1_jaayu6z wrote

I’m a junior rn and switched from finance to information systems this year cuz of how my outlook on AI changed. What I like about my major is that it’s like 70% economics/business and 30% tech. While I’m not a pure programmer, I sorta act as a translator between the esoteric programming/machine learning jargon and business managers to reach goals. From your situation I’d highly suggest looking into if ur school has a program for somthing like that.

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tigerkingsam t1_jab0nwq wrote

Trust me AI is at least 10-15 years away from automating away work. I use AI algos at my workplace. Economics is usually more theoretical and hard to find work in. Finance is a good career path, a lot of the stuff AI can’t do such has helping with very business specific decision making and querying.

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SpecialMembership t1_jab8evw wrote

you need the above-normal human intelligence AGI to replace the finance workers. even following the predictions of ray Kurzweil(which is very very optimistic) it may happen only after 2029.

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spiritus_dei t1_jabd2th wrote

After much debate with ChatGPT here is its advice, "My advice would be to focus on developing skills and knowledge that are unlikely to be automated in the near future. This includes skills that require emotional intelligence, empathy, and interpersonal communication, such as counseling, teaching, social work, and healthcare. It also includes skills that require physical dexterity, such as plumbing, carpentry, and mechanics."

Plumber, carpenter, and mechanic are probably your safest bets.

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epSos-DE t1_jabdnie wrote

Finance jobs were already automated to a high degree.

Regardless, the banks found more ways to employ more people.

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Different_Muscle_116 t1_jabgixj wrote

Electrician is really solid. The more automation there is, the more work there is for electricians to wire it. Plus data centers will only ever increase in numbers. It takes a lot of electricians to wire a modern massive data center.

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spiritus_dei t1_jabh1h5 wrote

I'm surprised more people don't go into skilled trades even without factoring in AI. They have a nice apprentice program where they pay you to learn the skill -- a much better financial model than college.

I suppose medical school is sort of an apprentice program since they actually practice medicine. Law school is completely decoupled and should go back to being an apprentice program -- for the small subgroup of lawyers that survive the AI displacement. Trial lawyers will still be needed to physically show up and argue cases for a long time.

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JustinianIV t1_jabj62h wrote

Man people here hype things up way too much, i’ve been a futurist since the 2000s and one lesson I’ve learned time and again is tech will disappoint. LLMs will be a helpful sidekick at most, ain’t no ChatGPT gonna do replace anyone at work. AI freeze for the next decade is the most likely outcome as they hype dies down.

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tregtronics t1_jablznq wrote

Plumber. No ai is going to replace a plumber. Skip finance and economics, or do the public sector finance.

Source: currently using algorithms that do economic models for finance that will eventually be ai driven.

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modern-b1acksmith t1_jabnwu8 wrote

If you live in a country that has free higher education, it is likely your living under a huge tax burden filled with bureaucracy and waste. Tax accounting will be the last to automate because AI drives efficient spending. That money isn't disappearing, its being delivered into the pockets of political figures and government mangers.

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Lomofre88 t1_jabs0yw wrote

Call me selfish, but I believe it's best to gather as much capital as you can, so you can live off your financial wealth when times will be tough. You'll have the freedom to look around you and adapt to the new world without being dependant on politicians to bail you out.

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CertainMiddle2382 t1_jabs40u wrote

Put AI before finance or economy and you’ll be the last to go.

15 years ago, back then in medicine, elite academics were coming from physics. I said, all medical academics careers are gonna be given to AI-pick your specialty.

Bonus, you don’t actually need to know anything about it, just have some professors and postdocs numbers and will be all. It is so fashionable and obscure everybody will see AI wherever they wish to :-)

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purepersistence t1_jabsw4d wrote

>no job is safe in the advent of AGI

AI will replace some jobs and not others before it becomes AGI which might be never or hundreds of years. A better LLM is not AGI. AGI requires new algorithms and levels of abstraction that nobody has specifically defined.

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imlaggingsobad t1_jabuq1s wrote

Nouriel Roubini thinks his job (economist) will get automated pretty soon. I personally think there are some jobs in finance (trading, investing) that might be around for a while because they require human judgement. But pretty much everything in finance/economics will be affected.

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PoliticallyCorrect- t1_jac1ot1 wrote

Yep, in the short-term, I see it happening in customer support, copywriting, translation, data science, accounting ...

In the medium-term, long before AGI, it will be happening in Law, Software development, healthcare and much more

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Yzerman_19 t1_jaca5cc wrote

It’s true. I flip houses. I don’t know how you cost effectively get a robot to renovate old homes. Maybe parts of the exterior but inside? I’m not so sure. But then I’m no expert.

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Nukemouse t1_jacebbc wrote

I think the issue is less all work being automated away and more that it will increase efficiency so that less jobs are needed and a large people become unemployed. Even without AI before the pandemic my country had more people seeking jobs than jobs that actually existed.

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Hour-Future-4110 t1_jaciiw3 wrote

Learn how to use Ai and either scale up your offerings with it or if you’re a good communicator teach businesses how to use it. It is possible to get paid to replace yourself you just have to wipe some of the doom and gloom off your mindset

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Ok_Garden_1877 t1_jacz6xv wrote

Get a masters in computer science, with a focus on AI.

Modern problems require modern solutions.

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nomorsecrets t1_jad56ue wrote

This.
I don't understand how so many people are failing to see this point.
The efficiency increase is how AI will initially take real jobs.
Less and less humans will be needed over time.
It will happen this year; it's happening right now.

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