Key Takeaways
- Elon Musk warns AI will cause “a lot of trauma and disruption” during transition
- Digital/desk jobs will be replaced “like lightning” while physical jobs remain longer
- Predicts “universal high income” where work becomes optional in benign AI scenario
Elon Musk has issued another stark warning about artificial intelligence, predicting widespread job displacement and societal disruption during the transition to an AI-dominated future. The Tesla and xAI CEO made these comments during a recent appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast, where he described AI as a “supersonic tsunami” that will fundamentally reshape employment.
The Digital Job Apocalypse
Musk asserted that AI is already replacing desk jobs and will accelerate this transformation dramatically. He emphasized that any work involving digital tasks performed on computers will be rapidly overtaken by artificial intelligence.
“Anything that is digital, which is just someone at a computer doing something, AI is going to take over those jobs like lightning,” Musk said, adding “It’s just happening.Like I said, AI is the supersonic tsunami. ”
While demand for employment will persist, Musk explained these won’t be the same roles available today. He noted this pattern of technological displacement has occurred throughout modern history, though at an unprecedented pace with AI.
Physical Work’s Temporary Reprieve
The tech billionaire drew a crucial distinction between digital and physical labor, suggesting jobs involving tangible tasks will withstand AI automation for significantly longer.
“Anything that’s physically moving atoms, like cooking food or farming, anything that’s physical, those jobs will exist for a much longer time,” he said.
Universal High Income: The Silver Lining
Despite the disruptive transition, Musk remains optimistic about AI’s long-term potential in a “benign scenario” that avoids catastrophic outcomes. He envisions a future where wealth becomes universally accessible through what he terms “universal high income” rather than basic income.
“Ultimately, working will be optional because you’ll have robots plus AI,” he said.
“And we’ll have, in a benign scenario, universal high income, meaning anyone can have any products or services that they want, but there will be a lot of trauma and disruption along the way,” he added.
The path to this automated utopia, however, will be marked by significant societal challenges as traditional employment structures collapse.



