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Deutsche Bank asked AI how it was planning to destroy jobs. And the robot answered

In a meta-experiment on the future of the global economy, Deutsche Bank Research Institute turned to the machine itself for answers. Rather than relying solely on traditional economic modeling, analysts asked their proprietary AI tool, dbLumina, to identify exactly which industries it intends to upend. The resulting report offers a stark vision at a “great rebalancing,” pinpointing exactly where the algorithms expect to displace human labor.

The experiment, detailed in a report titled “What AI says about AI eating itself and the world…,” utilized Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro model to generate a deep analysis of global sectors. The findings suggest that data-rich industries with repetitive tasks are standing on a precipice, while those requiring human empathy or manual dexterity in unpredictable environments remain safe—for now.

(And Fortune Intelligence, the wing of the Fortune newsroom that uses generative AI as a research tool, conducted a meta-meta-experiment to expedite the publishing of this news article about it.)

The AI Is Eating Its Own Tail

Perhaps the most ironic conclusion for Silicon Valley is that the sector most exposed to disruption may be the one building the disruptors: Information Technology and Software. The AI found the sector to be particularly susceptible because software development is built on logic and patterns—the very qualities AI systems are designed to automate.

The report notes that over 85% of developers are already using AI coding assistants, with productivity gains of up to 60%. That efficiency boost may help corporations, but it also raises concerns about the long-term sustainability of traditional software licensing models. The recent $2 trillion sell-off in software stocks over two weeks, dubbed the “SaaSpocalypse,” underscores investor anxiety and the evaporation of entry-level coding roles.

Finance and Customer Service on the Block

Beyond tech, the AI set its sights on the financial sector. It identified wealth management as a primary target, predicting an even greater shift toward “robo-advisors.” The report projects that by 2027, AI-driven tools could be the primary source of advice for nearly 80% of retail investors, fundamentally challenging the role of human financial advisors.

Customer service faces an even faster transformation. The AI predicted that it would handle up to 75% of all customer service interactions by 2026, leaving human agents to only the most complex or sensitive cases. Media and Entertainment were also flagged as “likely to be disrupted,” as generative AI moves from analyzing content to producing it, actively competing with human creatives. (Media theorist Doug Shapiro told Fortune in January that this was the sector’s version of the famous “infinite monkey theorem,” with every media company competing against a proverbial infinite number of monkeys.)

The Human “Safe Zones”

However, the robot was humble about its limitations. The report outlined “sectors of resilience” where human traits remain premium currency. Jobs requiring “deep empathy,” such as nursing, therapy, and early childhood education, were insulated from the algorithm’s reach, ceded the AI about its own future dastardly impact.

Additionally, the AI admitted that AI struggles with the physical world. Skilled trades like plumbing, carpentry, and construction—which require manual dexterity in messy, unpredictable environments—were deemed one of the least digitized and least vulnerable sectors. High-level strategic leadership also remains a “human-only” zone, as AI lacks the intuition required for complex corporate negotiation.

The Verdict

Deutsche Bank’s human analysts, Jim Reid and Adrian Cox, noted that the AI’s self-assessment was a “faithful reflection of the current consensus”. However, they cautioned that the machine likely underestimated the physical obstacles to its own takeover, such as the massive energy requirements for data centers and data quality governance.

Ultimately, the AI views its rise as a transformation rather than an apocalypse. While it foresees displacing 92 million jobs by 2030, it also predicts the creation of 170 million new roles, resulting in a net gain for the global workforce. “However, this transition will be disruptive,” Reid and Cox wrote, with estimates suggesting that activities accounting for up to 30% of hours currently worked in the US could be automated by 2030, “necessitating as many as 12 million occupational transitions.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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