News | National
14 Aug 2025 8:02
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    AI is peeling back the layers of ‘low-value’ work – NZ may be well placed to adapt

    As AI becomes more pervasive, New Zealand’s economic strength may lie in work where the value is measured in what is grown, built, repaired and cared for.

    Kenny Ching, Senior Lecturer, Business School, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
    The Conversation


    As generative artificial intelligence (AI) advances at breakneck speed, it is upending assumptions about which jobs are “safe” from automation.

    Disruption now extends well beyond manual or routine work into white-collar roles once considered untouchable. Tools such as ChatGPT, Claude and Midjourney can produce policy briefs, analytical reports, software code, design assets and marketing copy in seconds.

    Even in specialised domains, systems such as PolicyPulse can generate structured briefs and thematic syntheses – tasks that once required teams of experts.

    If AI can so easily replicate large swaths of professional output, how much of the economy rests on work that creates the appearance of value rather than tangible impact?

    And could New Zealand – anchored in sectors rooted in physical work, human judgement and essential services – be structurally better placed to thrive?

    AI’s exposure effect

    A 2023 Goldman Sachs report estimated generative AI could automate work equivalent to 300 million full-time jobs globally. The highest exposure is in administrative, legal and other information-heavy sectors.

    In 2024, the International Monetary Fund warned that economies reliant on high-skilled services – such as education, law and finance – face both job losses and rising inequality.

    This echoes author David Graeber’s concept of “bullshit jobs” – roles that add little genuine value. Between 2000 and 2018, most net job growth came from low productivity service sectors such as marketing, consulting and corporate administration. These are precisely the kinds of tasks AI can now perform in seconds.

    Consultancy firm McKinsey estimates 60–70% of activities in office support, customer service and professional services can be automated. The OECD has noted routine information processing jobs face the greatest risk. AI is not only replacing roles – it is revealing how insubstantial many of them were.

    Some argue finance illustrates this reality starkly: intended to allocate capital efficiently, the sector has expanded beyond its productive purpose.

    Businessman Adair Turner famously called much of it “socially useless”, while research from the Bank for International Settlements found oversized financial sectors can stifle innovation by diverting talent from more productive areas.

    Now, AI is automating functions such as risk modelling, compliance and equity research, prompting a reassessment of the sector’s true economic value.

    New Zealand’s real-economy advantage

    New Zealand – often caricatured as a remote, agrarian outpost – may be structurally insulated from the worst of the AI shock. Roughly 70% of its exports come from agriculture, horticulture, seafood and forestry.

    Domestically, leading employment sectors include aged care, physiotherapy, plumbing, childcare and early childhood education.

    These roles require physical dexterity, sensory judgement and human empathy – skills AI cannot yet credibly replicate.

    In an era when many advanced economies are over-invested in finance, bureaucracy and “bullshit jobs”, New Zealand’s focus on tangible, value-producing work could be a strategic strength.

    Innovation in these sectors is happening too. Robotic milking systems have improved dairy efficiency and animal welfare, biosecurity monitoring safeguards exports, and forestry research is targeting carbon neutral timber.

    If finance reveals how AI strips away illusions, higher education shows its disruptive power. Generative AI can now produce essays credible enough to pass as human work.

    The humanities tend to reward theoretical fluency and stylistic polish – areas where AI excels. By contrast, science, technology, engineering and mathematics – the so-called STEM subjects – demand precision, formal logic and testable hypotheses, which are harder for AI to mimic. OECD data has shown STEM-related occupations face the lowest automation risk.

    New Zealand’s recent investment in STEM education is timely. But it must be matched by support for primary and secondary teachers – roles grounded in mentorship and adaptive instruction, which remain beyond AI’s reach.

    A global pivot

    Service-heavy economies such as Singapore, Britain and parts of the United States face growing pressure to adapt.

    Researchers warn that reliance on low-productivity, routine service work risks long-term stagnation unless economies pivot to innovation-led sectors.

    New Zealand’s base in agriculture, manufacturing, trades and essential services offers comparative resilience – but only if reinforced by investment in measurable innovation and productivity.

    New Zealand’s advantage lies not in chasing abstract, easily automated work, but in deepening its strengths in sectors AI cannot yet touch – food production, care and infrastructure.

    These are industries where value is measured in what is grown, built, repaired and cared for – not in presentation slides.

    As AI redraws the contours of global labour markets, every country must ask: if a job can be done by an algorithm, was it ever as significant as we believed?

    For New Zealand, the answer may be to double down on the work that cannot be coded – turning what once looked like a structural constraint into a defining strength.

    The Conversation

    Kenny Ching does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     14 Aug: House prices are back on the rise, but Auckland and Wellington prices are taking longer to turn around
     14 Aug: Police have shot two people in Christchurch overnight - killing one, and critically injuring a second
     14 Aug: A police incident has closed State Highway 1 between Burnham and Rolleston, south of Christchurch
     14 Aug: Central Otago's troubled Shotover wastewater treatment plant is going to be checked on less regularly
     13 Aug: Kaitaia District Court has ruled in favour of the Tenancy Tribunal - over the status of motel residents
     13 Aug: The Wellington Phoenix have signed A-League veteran Nikola Mileusnic to their men's squad for the upcoming season
     13 Aug: A magnitude 4.8 earthquake's shaken Hastings - just before 6pm
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The All Blacks have put themselves through their paces in Buenos Aires as they count down to the start of the Rugby Championship against Argentina More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    House prices are back on the rise, but Auckland and Wellington prices are taking longer to turn around More...



     Today's News

    Soccer:
    A second fixture has been locked into the All Whites' October international football window 7:57

    International:
    Pacific Islands race to contain 'largest dengue fever outbreak in a decade', as disease kills 18 people 7:57

    International:
    Deaths in Gaza from airdrops as countries try to deliver more aid 7:47

    Business:
    House prices are back on the rise, but Auckland and Wellington prices are taking longer to turn around 7:47

    Entertainment:
    Linda Hogan has paid tribute to her ex-husband Hulk Hogan on what would've been his 72nd birthday 7:42

    Law and Order:
    Police have shot two people in Christchurch overnight - killing one, and critically injuring a second 7:37

    International:
    China and US clash over South China Sea operation near disputed shoal 7:27

    Christchurch:
    A police incident has closed State Highway 1 between Burnham and Rolleston, south of Christchurch 7:27

    Law and Order:
    Central Otago's troubled Shotover wastewater treatment plant is going to be checked on less regularly 7:17

    Entertainment:
    Bob Odenkirk "turned grey right away" after suffering a heart attack on the set of Better Call Saul 7:12


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd