When it comes to how we work, Covid just changed everything. As we continue to adjust to new ways of working, will the future herald a quiet revolution or mass disruption?
In the 1930s, the British economist John Maynard Keynes made a startling prediction: by the time his children had grown up, people might be working just 15 hours a week.1
That didn’t come to pass. Instead, Keynes died of a heart attack in 1946 – allegedly from working too hard – and average annual working hours have barely budged since.2
Sure, the steady rise of white-collar service jobs, the wholesale destruction of unions, and the advent of the internet may have changed the nature of work over time. But nothing near as drastic as Keynes – and others – had foretold.
Then came Covid – and everything changed. Not only are many of us now working from home more often, a trend that is having vast and underappreciated ripple effects across the economy. But the massive increase in AI investment in the past 18 months could one day make Keynes’ prediction a reality – or worse, see millions disappear from the workforce altogether.
All this means the next 50 years of work, and society as a result, will look radically different from today. Yet it’s a revolution that many investors are still overlooking.