'My prediction is that work will be optional': Elon Musk foresees a future where jobs will be a hobby, due to AI and robotics

Elon Musk
(Image credit: DAVID MCNEW/AFP via Getty Images)

The current job landscape is far from fruitful for the average person.

Navigating hundreds of job postings, avoiding those that are nothing but scams, and constantly updating your resume and cover letter can be taxing for unemployed individuals. And that’s all before you even get a response from one of the jobs you’ve applied for, and receive the opportunity to sit down for an interview.

Elon Musk predicts jobs turning into something like a hobby in the next 10 to 20 years

How to watch SNL Elon Musk

(Image credit: BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / Getty)

During an onstage discussion about technology with NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang at last year’s U.S.-Saudi Arabia Investment Forum in Washington, D.C., Elon Musk leaned into one of his biggest predictions yet: a future where work isn’t required.

“My prediction is that work will be optional. It’ll be like playing sports or a video game or something like that,” Musk said. He compared it to the difference between buying vegetables at the store versus growing them yourself — harder, but something people might still choose to do simply because they enjoy it.

Huang offered a more grounded version of what that shift could look like. “Everyone’s jobs will be different,” he said. “As the mundane things we do become simpler and we become more productive, you’ll have more time to pursue ideas.”

Still, it’s hard to picture a world where farmers, factory workers and other hands-on professions are fully replaced by AI-powered machines anytime soon. But it’s also not hard to understand why people are nervous. Layoffs, automation and constant uncertainty have made job security feel shaky, even for workers who are currently employed — and for many families, retirement already feels less like a plan and more like a fantasy.

Musk has even suggested AI could make retirement savings irrelevant. On the 'Moonshots with Peter Diamandis' podcast, he said: “Don’t worry about squirreling money away for retirement. In 10 or 20 years, it won’t matter. In the relatively near future, you could have whatever you want.”

For anyone living paycheck to paycheck, trying to keep bills paid and a roof overhead, that kind of future doesn’t just sound optimistic — it sounds almost impossible to believe.

Bill Gates also sees AI taking over important jobs, such as those of teachers and doctors

Bill Gates in 2019

(Image credit: Mike Cohen/Getty Images for The New York Times)

Another tech industry giant offered his outlook on what jobs AI may take over, including professors and even doctors.

Last year, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates popped up on an episode of 'The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon' and provided some comments on the continued evolution of AI. “The era that we're just starting is that intelligence is rare, you know, a great doctor, a great teacher,” Gates said. “And with AI, over the next decade, that will become free and commonplace. Great medical advice, great tutoring.”

Gates even went so far as to question whether the traditional five-day work week will still exist with the rising presence of AI. “Should we just work two or three days a week?” he pondered. “So I love the way it'll drive innovation forward, but I think it's a little bit unknown if we'll be able to shape it. And so, legitimately, people are like ‘wow, this is a bit scary.’ It's completely new territory.”

Bottom line

Elon Musk and Bill Gates are both painting a future where AI and robotics don’t just assist workers — they take over major parts of the job market, deliver “great” tutoring and medical advice on demand, and leave humans free to spend less time working and more time creating.

And sure, parts of that vision sound plausible. But the idea of a world where jobs are optional and saving for retirement no longer matters isn’t exactly comforting.

Imagining classrooms overtaken by robotic tutors and humans being operated on by nothing but AI-powered doctors doesn’t seem all that crazy to conceive of. But here’s hoping that the human element that comes with those types of professions still takes precedent over a focus on robots doing all the work.


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Elton Jones
AI Writer

Elton Jones is a longtime tech writer with a penchant for producing pieces about video games, mobile devices, headsets and now AI. Since 2011, he has applied his knowledge of those topics to compose in-depth articles for the likes of The Christian Post, Complex, TechRadar, Heavy, ONE37pm and more. Alongside his skillset as a writer and editor, Elton has also lent his talents to the world of podcasting and on-camera interviews.

Elton's curiosities take him to every corner of the web to see what's trending and what's soon to be across the ever evolving technology landscape. With a newfound appreciation for all things AI, Elton hopes to make the most complicated subjects in that area easily understandable for the uninformed and those in the know.

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