People, AI Agents, and Robots: How the Structure of Labor is Changing
More Than Half of Work is Open to Automation
According to estimates by McKinsey Global Institute, approximately 57% of working time in the US is potentially automatable with current technology. Of this:
- 44% can be performed by AI agents β software systems capable of analyzing data, making decisions, and acting autonomously;
- 13% by robots, performing physical and routine operations.
These figures do not signify "job disappearance." They point to a far more significant shift: work is ceasing to be monolithic. It is breaking down into tasks, and each task is assigned to its most efficient performer β a human, an agent, or a robot.
AI Agents as a New Class of "Workers"
While robots are traditionally associated with physical labor, AI agents represent the automation of cognitive, digital work:
- Processing applications and documents
- Data analysis and scoring
- Customer support
- Coordinating processes between systems
- Making routine decisions within business rules
This is precisely why the share of tasks potentially performed by agents is so high β 44% of all working hours. A significant portion of the modern economy is not physical production, but work with information, processes, and decisions.
In essence, AI agents are becoming digital employees integrated into business processes: they don't "help," they work.
Where Humans Remain Indispensable
At the same time, 43% of working time is not automatable. The key reason is social and emotional skills, which still remain the domain of humans:
- Complex negotiations
- People management
- Empathy and trust
- Creativity and meaning-making
- Decision-making under uncertainty and value conflicts
Even in tasks where AI is actively involved, humans increasingly take on the role of:
- Solution architect
- Controller and arbitrator
- Bearer of responsibility
The future is not "human versus machine," but human + agent + robot.
A New Architecture of Labor
Looking at the labor market as a system, it becomes evident: we are moving towards a hybrid architecture where:
- Humans are responsible for goals, meaning, and interaction;
- AI agents handle speed, scale, and accuracy in digital processes;
- Robots are responsible for physical execution and repetitive operations.
The companies of the future will compete not only with their human teams but also with the quality of their agents: their architecture, training, integration, and ability to work in conjunction with humans.
It is not the profession that is automated, but the task. The winners are not those who "replace people," but those who correctly assemble a system of people, agents, and robots.
This is precisely the main managerial and technological challenge of the coming years.