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California launches first AI job-loss tracker
California has built the first state tool to watch for AI wiping out jobs. The early read: no mass layoffs yet, but warning signs are flashing in the Bay Area and among college-educated workers. Everyone argues about whether AI is killing jobs. Almost nobody has hard data. California has now built a tool to find some. The state has launched what it calls a first-in-the-nation system to track AI-related job loss as it happens. The dashboard is called the California AI-Unemployment Tracker, or CAIT. Governor Gavin Newsom announced it on Thursday and called it an early warning system. His office built it with the California Policy Lab, a nonpartisan research centre at the University of California, and the state Employment Development Department. The method is the clever part. It takes California's monthly unemployment-insurance claims and tags each one by how exposed the worker's old job was to AI. Track that share over time, and a trend should surface before the headlines do. The data updates every month, and anyone can download it. What the numbers show so far The early read is calm, with one catch. Across the state, the researchers found no sign of a surge in AI-driven layoffs. The share of claims coming from AI-exposed workers has not risen meaningfully since ChatGPT arrived in late 2022. Dig into the subgroups, though, and the picture shifts. Claims from college-educated workers in high-exposure jobs climbed after ChatGPT-3.5 launched. They have stayed elevated through May 2026. Workers in low-exposure jobs saw no such change. Geography tells a similar story. Claims rose sharply among AI-exposed workers in the San Francisco Bay Area. They also ran high in technology sectors such as information and professional services. The numbers did not show outsized jumps by race, gender, or age. "Right now, we are not seeing evidence of large-scale AI-related layoffs in California's labor market," said Ben Hyman, a senior researcher at the lab and a co-author. "But we do see patterns in certain regions like the Bay Area, in certain tech-heavy sectors, and among highly AI-exposed workers with college degrees." Why the caveats matter The lab is unusually blunt about what the tool cannot do. It cannot prove that AI caused any single layoff. No dataset can. The tracker is a signal, the researchers stress, not proof. There are blind spots too. Unemployment claims miss gig workers, the self-employed, and anyone who never files. Workers report their own job titles, and no one verifies them. The researchers also strip out the pandemic years, because that surge would otherwise swamp the trend. The honest framing is that this is an early instrument, not a verdict. The exposure score leans on two measures. One, built by OpenAI and academic researchers, asks whether a model could handle at least half of a job's tasks. The other, drawn from Anthropic's economic index, tracks how often workers actually use Claude to do their work. Read together, they give a fuller picture than either alone. The split is intuitive once you see the examples. The tool rates customer service representatives and software developers as highly exposed. It puts heavy-goods drivers and nursing assistants near the bottom. "This new tracker helps replace speculation with evidence," said Till von Wachter, the UCLA economist who co-led the work, "giving us a clearer understanding of what's changing." A political moment, not just a research one The timing is not subtle. Newsom is widely expected to run for president in 2028. Politicians in both parties now race to look proactive on AI and jobs, as voters worry about costs and watch data centres push up local power bills. California has particular reason to act. It carries the highest unemployment rate of any state, and it hosts most of the companies building advanced AI. That makes it both the centre of the boom and a natural test case for its fallout. Public mood has hardened, too. American attitudes to AI have soured even as use of it climbs. About one in five US workers now use AI in their job, up sharply on a year earlier. The same tools people increasingly rely on are the ones they fear. Part of a wider scramble California is not the first to try this, only the most ambitious. New York changed its layoff-notice rules in 2025 to flag cuts tied to AI. Connecticut passed a similar measure last month. The weakness is obvious, because it relies on employers to own up. Of more than 160 New York firms that reported mass layoffs, none blamed AI. The anxiety driving all this is not abstract. America's carmakers have already blamed AI for white-collar cuts. California is fighting its own court battle over alleged AI hiring bias in screening software. Public trust, meanwhile, keeps sliding. The harder question is what a state does once it has the data. Newsom's tracker arrived under an executive order meant to prepare workers for disruption. The same push has fed broader worker retraining efforts, some bankrolled by the AI labs themselves. Even so, plenty of insiders disagree on the threat. Sam Altman, for one, has argued that an AI jobs apocalypse is unlikely. The open question The tracker turns a shouting match into something measurable. That alone is progress. It hands policymakers a place to look first, and it lets the public see the same numbers. The limits are real, though. A monthly dashboard can flag a wobble, but it cannot say for sure what caused it. Its signals will always need other evidence beside them. And spotting trouble early only helps if someone acts on the warning. For now, California has done the rare thing and replaced a guess with a gauge. Whether that gauge can catch the damage in time, and whether the state responds when it does, is the question this tool leaves open.
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The AI 'Jobpocalypse' Is Nowhere to Be Seen in California, the Heartland of Tech
As a wave of AI fervor has washed over Silicon Valley, fear of an impending "jobpocalypse" has followed in its wake. Thanks in no small part to lofty prognostications from tech CEOs themselves -- Anthropic's Dario Amodei, for example, famously predicted that AI could soon replace half of all entry-level white collar jobs -- many industries have been bracing for what they've been told will be a surge of human employees being replaced by machines. The economic and social disruptions caused by such mass displacement, so the true-believers say, will be of a magnitude unlike anything ever seen in human history. For the time being, however, such seismic effects have yet to materialize. More individuals and businesses are now using AI than ever before, and yet on the whole, the job market seems to be riding the wave without any noticeable calamity. The feared jobpocalypse is nowhere in sight. That's at least the case in California, according to data released Thursday alongside a new public dashboard designed to track the impacts of AI throughout the state's labor market. Despite being the global economic and cultural epicentre of tech, the state hasn't yet begun to experience the displacement that many tech moguls have prophesied. "Right now, we are not seeing evidence of large-scale AI-related layoffs in California's labor market," Ben Hyman, an economist and senior researcher at the California Policy Lab, a research institute within the University of California, said in a statement. There were exceptions to that general rule, however: Hyman added that unemployment claims in certain, more exposed regions (like the Bay Area) and tech-heavy sectors (like finance, education, and IT) had seen an increase in recent years, thanks to AI. "It will be important to continue monitoring trends for those workers, as well as others, so that policymakers can respond appropriately," he said. The public dashboard, called the California AI-Unemployment Tracker (CAIT), was built via a collaboration of the California Policy Lab's UCLA division and the Employment Development Department (EDD), an agency that provides financial and job-seeking assistance for unemployed Californians, among other functions. The "first-in-the-nation" tool, as it was described in a press release, will be updated monthly. It is intended to help state policymakers identify the sectors and regions most in need of support, while giving workers a clearer sense of how vulnerable their jobs may be to AI-displacement. The data and public dashboard follow an executive order issued in May by California Governor Gavin Newsom, directing state agencies to start preparing for AI-driven disruptions to the labor market in collaboration with experts across academia and the private sector. The data-tracking dashboard "provides us with a clearer picture of how AI is affecting working people and jobs, and where we need to focus support and training," Stewart Knox, Secretary of the California Labor & Workforce Development Agency, said in a statement. "By grounding our decisions in data, we can respond early and strengthen pathways into good jobs to ensure California's workforce is able to adapt and thrive as technology evolves." Leading AI developers like Anthropic, Microsoft, and OpenAI have also conducted research into the current and possible future impacts of AI on the job market, with an eye towards guiding both policymakers and workers.
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California debuts the nation's first state-level tool to monitor AI job loss through unemployment insurance claims. While no mass layoffs have materialized statewide, data reveals elevated claims among college-educated workers in AI-exposed jobs and Bay Area tech sectors since ChatGPT's launch.
California has launched the California AI-Unemployment Tracker (CAIT), a first-in-the-nation system designed to monitor AI job loss as it unfolds across the state
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. Governor Gavin Newsom announced the dashboard on Thursday, positioning it as an early warning system to detect AI-driven labor market disruptions before they become headline news1
. The state-level tool to track AI-related job losses was developed through a collaboration between the California Policy Lab at the University of California, the Employment Development Department, and the governor's office2
.
Source: Gizmodo
The tracking method analyzes monthly unemployment insurance claims and tags each one based on how exposed the worker's previous occupation was to AI technologies
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. By monitoring this share over time, researchers aim to identify trends in AI-related job displacement before they escalate. The exposure scoring relies on two measures: one developed by OpenAI and academic researchers that assesses whether AI models could handle at least half of a job's tasks, and another from Anthropic's economic index that tracks how frequently workers use Claude in their daily work1
. The dashboard updates monthly and makes all data publicly downloadable.The initial findings paint a nuanced picture of AI's impact on employment. Statewide, researchers found no evidence of large-scale AI-related layoffs since ChatGPT launched in late 2022
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. "Right now, we are not seeing evidence of large-scale AI-related layoffs in California's labor market," said Ben Hyman, a senior researcher at the California Policy Lab1
. The feared "jobpocalypse" that tech CEOs like Anthropic's Dario Amodei have predicted—claiming AI could soon replace half of all entry-level white collar jobs—has not materialized in California's data2
.However, drilling into subgroups reveals concerning patterns. Claims from college-educated workers in high-exposure jobs climbed after ChatGPT-3.5 launched and have remained elevated through May 2026
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. Geography tells a similar story: claims rose sharply among AI-exposed workers in the Bay Area, and remained high in tech sectors such as information, professional services, finance, education, and IT1
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. Workers in low-exposure jobs saw no such change, and the data showed no outsized jumps by race, gender, or age1
.The tool rates customer service representatives and software developers as highly exposed to AI economic impact, while placing heavy-goods drivers and nursing assistants near the bottom of the job vulnerability scale
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.Researchers emphasize significant caveats about what the tracker can and cannot reveal. The tool cannot prove that AI caused any single layoff—it serves as a signal rather than definitive proof of causation
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. Blind spots exist throughout the data: unemployment claims miss gig workers, the self-employed, and anyone who never files. Workers self-report job titles without verification, and researchers stripped out pandemic years to prevent that surge from distorting trends1
."This new tracker helps replace speculation with evidence," said Till von Wachter, the UCLA economist who co-led the work, "giving us a clearer understanding of what's changing"
1
. The honest framing positions this as an early instrument for detecting patterns, not a final verdict on AI's impact on employment.Related Stories
The dashboard's release carries political weight. Newsom, widely expected to run for president in 2028, is positioning California as proactive on AI policy amid growing voter anxiety about automation and rising power costs from data centres
1
. California carries the highest unemployment rate of any state while hosting most companies building advanced AI, making it both the centre of the boom and a natural test case for its consequences1
.The tracker follows an executive order Newsom issued in May directing state agencies to prepare for AI-driven labor market disruptions in collaboration with academic and private sector experts
2
. "This provides us with a clearer picture of how AI is affecting working people and jobs, and where we need to focus support and training," said Stewart Knox, Secretary of the California Labor & Workforce Development Agency2
.California is not alone in this effort. New York changed its layoff-notice rules in 2025 to flag cuts tied to AI, and Connecticut passed similar measures last month
1
. However, of more than 160 New York firms that reported mass layoffs, none blamed AI, highlighting the weakness of systems that rely on employer self-reporting1
. American attitudes toward AI have soured even as usage climbs—about one in five US workers now use AI in their job, up sharply from a year earlier1
. Leading AI developers like Anthropic, Microsoft, and OpenAI have also conducted research into AI's current and future impacts on the job market2
.Summarized by
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