
Goldman's Solomon Says AI Won't Wipe Out White Collar Jobs. I've Heard This Before.
The banking CEO's optimism about AI and employment sounds familiar to anyone who watched automation transform factory floors.
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2026 might be the year of mega IPOs, with SpaceX and Anthropic both filing to go public. That's the headline everyone's running with after Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon appeared on Bloomberg's Odd Lots podcast this week. But I'll be honest, what caught my attention wasn't the IPO chatter. It was Solomon's prediction that AI won't cause a "major white collar wipeout."
I've heard versions of this before. Different technology, different decade, same confidence.
Why does a bank CEO's opinion matter for robotics?
Look, here's the thing. Banks are deploying AI across their entire workforce right now, from back-office processing to junior analysts to senior investment bankers. Solomon described it as a kind of real-time experiment in how knowledge work changes when you hand everyone AI tools. That's useful data for those of us watching automation in other sectors.
When I was at Kuka, we had customers who said similar things about industrial robots in the early 2000s. "This won't replace workers, it'll augment them." Sometimes that was true. Often it wasn't. The honest answer is that it depends on what you're measuring and over what timeframe.
Solomon's optimism might be right for Goldman specifically. They hire expensive people to do complex judgment work. The AI handles the grunt work, the humans handle the relationships and decisions. That model can work. But Goldman isn't a warehouse. It's not a call centre. It's not an accounting firm processing thousands of identical tax returns.
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