Business
Millions of Jobs Threatened in Asia-Pacific Amid Accelerating AI Adoption in Wealthy Nations
The rapid acceleration of artificial intelligence adoption across wealthy nations threatens to create a new era of global inequality, potentially displacing millions of workers across Asia-Pacific while concentrating economic gains in the hands of a few advanced economies, according to a stark warning issued by the United Nations Development Programme.
Key takeaways
- AI risks widening Asia-Pacific inequality, concentrating gains in a handful of advanced economies while exposing millions of low-skilled workers to displacement.
- Women, youth, and developing nations face the highest vulnerability, due to litmited skills, infrastructure, and governance capacity.
- Targeted, practical AI adoption, not cutting-edge innovation, offers the best path for poorer countries to capture benefits while limiting social disruption.
In a comprehensive report released this week, UNDP economists drew parallels between today’s AI revolution and the 19th-century Industrial Revolution, which divided the world into prosperous industrialized nations and impoverished regions – a pattern that could repeat itself unless urgent action is taken.
The $1 Trillion Opportunity and Risk
“Countries that invest in skills, computing power and sound governance systems will benefit, others risk being left far behind,”
Philip Schellekens, Chief Economist for UNDP’s Asia and Pacific region.
While AI is projected to inject nearly $1 trillion in economic gains across Asia over the next decade, the benefits remain heavily skewed. Advanced economies like China, Singapore, and South Korea have made substantial investments in AI infrastructure and are already reaping massive returns. Meanwhile, entry-level workers in South Asian nations face what UNDP describes as “significant exposure” to automation-driven job displacement.
The report indicates that AI could boost annual GDP growth in the region by approximately two percentage points and raise productivity by up to five percent in critical sectors including healthcare and finance. Yet these gains may bypass the majority of Asia-Pacific’s 4.3 billion people, more than 55 percent of the global population.
Women and Youth Most Vulnerable
The UNDP assessment identifies women and young adults as facing the greatest workplace threats from AI adoption, with potential setbacks to broader improvements in health, education, and income equality. The agency emphasized that limited infrastructure, skills training, computing capacity, and governance frameworks in developing nations “constrain the potential benefits of AI while amplifying risks.”
“AI is racing ahead, and many countries are still at the starting line,” said Kanni Wignaraja, UN Assistant Secretary-General and UNDP Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific. “The Asia and Pacific experience highlights how quickly gaps can emerge between those shaping AI and those being shaped by it.”
A Deeply Unequal Starting Point
The existing economic disparities make the challenge even more daunting. Afghanistan’s average income stands 200 times lower than Singapore’s, illustrating why AI adoption has become concentrated among wealthy nations. China alone holds nearly 70 percent of global AI patents, while six Asia-Pacific countries host more than 3,100 newly funded AI companies.
“We’re not starting from a level playing field in this region,” Schellekens noted. “This is the most unequal region in the whole world.”
Pragmatic Solutions for Developing Nations
Rather than racing to develop cutting-edge AI systems, UNDP recommends that countries like Cambodia, Papua New Guinea, and Vietnam focus on implementing simpler, voice-based technologies that frontline health workers and farmers can utilize even without reliable internet connectivity. Such practical applications could deliver immediate benefits while building the foundation for future advancement.
The UN agency is urging governments to prioritize ethical considerations and inclusive implementation strategies before expanding AI deployment further. Without deliberate intervention, UNDP warns, the AI revolution risks entrenching a new “great divergence” – one that could define global prosperity and poverty for generations to come.
As the technology juggernaut continues its relentless advance, the question remains whether policymakers will act swiftly enough to ensure that AI’s transformative power lifts all nations or leaves the world’s most vulnerable populations even further behind.
