Will the AI takeover spare politicians? Expert predicts 3 unexpected careers that could survive by 2045
Adam Dorr of RethinkX forecasts significant job losses by 2045 due to AI. Only roles needing emotional depth may survive. Dorr envisions a future of abundance but warns of extreme inequality without action. Soft skills remain crucial as AI struggl...

This time, the target isn’t a tool or a technique—it’s human labor itself.
Three Jobs May Survive, But That’s Not Comforting
In a twist of irony, the three professions that Adam Dorr believes will withstand the AI onslaught are also among humanity’s oldest: politicians, sex workers, and ethicists. Their resilience lies not in resistance to change, but in their uniquely human foundations—power, intimacy, and morality.Politics has existed in organized form since ancient civilizations like Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Greece. At its core, governance is about navigating human complexity, building consensus, reading emotional undercurrents, and exercising judgment in unpredictable social environments. Despite advances in AI-generated policy simulation, leadership still hinges on trust, charisma, and interpersonal negotiation—qualities machines have yet to convincingly replicate.
Sex work, often called “the world’s oldest profession,” similarly depends on human connection, physical presence, and emotional nuance. While AI-powered companionship and virtual intimacy are on the rise, some experts might contend that the core experience of human closeness and vulnerability remains beyond artificial reproduction.
Ethicists, meanwhile, hold the moral compass of society. As we usher in powerful technologies capable of reshaping civilization, the need for ethical reasoning and philosophical guidance becomes more urgent—not less. Machines can process data, but they cannot weigh values, assess right and wrong in grey areas, or guide societies through moral dilemmas that lack precedent.
From a Work Economy to a Post-Work Society?
While the prediction is stark, Dorr isn't entirely pessimistic. He envisions a future defined not by scarcity but by “super-abundance,” where machines meet most human needs. But such a vision demands urgent and radical changes to how society defines work, value, and ownership.“If we fail to act now,” Dorr cautions, “the consequences will be enormous—economic inequality on a scale we’ve never seen before.” He proposes bold experiments in social structure, such as universal basic income and new models of wealth distribution, to ensure that progress doesn’t leave humanity behind.
What AI Still Can’t Do
Interestingly, even as machines learn to perform complex medical diagnoses or develop apps on command, they continue to falter in one essential area: soft skills. Emotional intelligence, empathy, collaboration, and ethics—these remain stubbornly human domains. In a recent USA Today report, HR expert Madeline Mann noted that soft skills are now more important than ever. “It’s how people experience you,” she said. “That’s the edge AI can’t replicate.”The Ethical Bet of the Century
As AI systems inch closer to replacing cognitive labor at scale, the ethical dilemma becomes unavoidable: Just because we can replace humans—should we? And if we do, how do we preserve dignity, purpose, and human connection in a world run by machines?The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.