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Salary premiums could be at risk as use of ChatGPT and other AI tools grows

Afraid AI will take away your rice bowl? Here are four ways workers and policymakers can rise to the challenge.

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Office workers wearing face masks walking to work at Raffles Place within the heart of Singapore's financial centre in the CBD area at 9am on May 11, 2021.

The latest advances in AI are likely to make some jobs redundant, transform others and create new ones.

ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI

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The launch of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot ChatGPT in November 2022 has stoked longstanding fears of technology displacing jobs. 

This time, it is not just white-collar workers performing routine tasks who seem at imminent risk. With AI now able to compose stories, songs and artwork with human-like sophistication, members of the creative class – writers, artists and musicians – are suddenly in AI’s crosshairs. 

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