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Wednesday, February 18, 2026

The automation divide: Why women may bear the brunt of AI disruption in America

Artificial intelligence is no longer the future that is being talked about in the research labs. It is the writing of emails, data organisation, payroll system management and customer query streamlining. The discussion in boardrooms is about increased productivity. A question is also emerging in the offices of the United States: Who will lose the most with routine work being sucked up by AI?

According to a recent report by the Brookings Institution and Centre of Governance of AI, the solution is highly gendered. With access to large volumes of publicly accessible data and labour-market analytics made available through Lightcast, the researchers have discovered that women are overrepresented in those jobs that face the highest likelihood of automation by AI, specifically, clerical and administrative jobs.

The history behind the figures

It is not on the topic that women are less competent and less adaptable. Quite on the contrary, it clarifies that vulnerability is job-designed and not competence. The issue is in the occupational sorting, which has been a long-term trend situating women in some areas of the labour market.

Secretaries, payroll clerks, municipal clerks, and other administrative-type workers have tasks which are structured, bound by rules, and repeatable.

These are exactly the capabilities of modern AI systems that are becoming capable of doing. According to the report, it is estimated that approximately six million employees will be in an acute condition of adjusting to AI-related displacement. Among this group of workers, 86 percent are women.

Most of them in this bracket are older workers with fewer financial cushions and opportunities into other career paths.

The outcomes of automation of these jobs lie beyond job loss. They have an impact on savings, security of retirement, and long-term earning possibilities.

A long technological arc

The present time did not come in a vacuum. Technological advancements have transformed clerical work, changing typewriters to word processors, filing cabinets to cloud storage, and so on. All waves optimized tasks, simplified processes, and changed staffing requirements.

Artificial intelligence is a continuation of that trend, but accelerating.

There was tremendous growth of administrative employment in the twentieth century, with women joining the labor force in increasing numbers. Such jobs were very stable economically and offered a presence in a career. The same tools that were intended to enhance efficiency in offices are no longer required to perform some of that labour.

This is a contradiction to the dynamic. Technology provided openings to women during past times; it currently poses the risk to close it in certain areas.

Who can pivot and who cannot

The Brookings Centre’s Governance of AI report goes further to coin the term of adaptive capacity, which is the probability of displaced workers moving into other jobs with corresponding wages. Approximately 70 percent of employees in AI-sensitive jobs can be able to pivot successfully.

However, the most adaptable tend to be jobs more diversified by a larger set of skills: marketing, finance, science, and managerial jobs.

Such jobs are most likely to incorporate analytical thinking, strategic decisions, and human skills, which do not oppose AI systems. Conversely, if narrow-purpose administrative jobs are to be provided, there are less side-by-side opportunities. In the case of automation of core roles, internal redeployments could be very few.

The gap is not, then, really one of AI exposure but of the scope of transferable skills enshrined in a job.

Threat of increasing inequality

With the disruption of AI concentrated mostly on jobs dominated by women, gender differences might become even more established. Women are already facing wage disparities and career discontinuities when taking care of the home, and also the lack of equal representation in technical leadership positions. These structural imbalances may be increased by focal displacement in clerical industries.

The problem is not that policymakers and employers have to slow down technological advances, but to influence their distributional implications. The mitigator can be reskilling programs that cater to mid-career administrative employees, more explicit career transitions, and specialized financial protection.

Artificial intelligence could change the labor process, but not its social consequences. Risk distribution indicates a pattern of decades of labour-market patterns.

It will depend on the response of institutions as to whether those patterns will be hardened into a new stratum of inequality.

Technological revolutions tend to be swept away in broad abstract terms. But their effects are felt in personal lives, in the payroll clerk who is near retirement, the office administrator with a family to feed, and the municipal worker who has few choices. The emergence of AI is not only an innovation narrative. It is a narrative of those at both ends of the transition, and both the possibility of increasing the gap and the possibility of narrowing it.

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