Jensen Huang dismisses Anthropic CEO's claim that AI will eliminate jobs: 'He thinks AI is so scary, but only they should do it'

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Jensen Huang at VivaTech.

Jensen Huang took to the VivaTech stage to talk about AI, robots, and quantum. Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Jensen Huang disagrees with Dario Amodei's warning that AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.
  • "He thinks AI is so scary, but only they should do it," Huang said of the Anthropic CEO.
  • Nvidia's Huang says AI will replace some jobs but change others — including his own.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang isn't buying the AI jobs apocalypse narrative — especially not from Anthropic's CEO Dario Amodei.

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of VivaTech 2025 in Paris, Huang dismissed Amodei's claim that AI could soon wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.

"I pretty much disagree with almost everything he says," Huang said. "He thinks AI is so scary, but only they should do it."

Last month, Amodei told Axios that AI could spike unemployment by up to 20% in the next five years, gutting roles in law, finance, technology, and consulting.

He urged governments to stop "sugarcoating" the threat.

But Huang took aim at Amodei's prediction and provided a more optimistic view.

"If you want things to be done safely and responsibly, you should do it in the open," Huang said, likening AI development to medical research, where transparency and peer review are essential. "I believe AI is not that expensive. Do I think AI will change jobs? It will change everyone's — it's changed mine."

Huang acknowledged that some roles would disappear, but said that AI could also unlock creative opportunities.

He isn't the only CEO to have rebuked Amodei's outlook.

Cognizant CEO Ravi Kumar told Business Insider that AI will create more opportunities for fresh graduates by reducing the need for deep expertise and enabling faster upskilling.

While some are optimistic about AI's impact on jobs, there is already evidence that it has been disrupting them.

Data provided to BI by Revelio Labs found that since January 2023, there has been a steeper decline in job postings for roles with greater exposure to AI, such as IT specialists and data engineers.

Anthropic didn't immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

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