Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping labor markets around the world, driving significant gains in productivity and boosting wages, according to PwC’s 2025 Global AI Jobs Barometer. The report, which analyzes data from nearly 1 billion jobs across multiple sectors, finds that industries with high artificial intelligence exposure see employee revenue growth three times greater than those less impacted by the technology. Far from causing widespread job losses, artificial intelligence acts as a catalyst for increased human value creation and has become a fundamental engine of business profitability.
The study highlights three transformative trends. First, there is a direct link between artificial intelligence adoption and wage growth. Sectors embracing artificial intelligence report wages rising at double the rate of less-impacted industries. Employees with artificial intelligence-specific skills enjoy wage premiums of 56 percent, up sharply from 25 percent a year ago, underscoring the market’s escalating value on expertise in the field. Second, the essential requirements for artificial intelligence-exposed roles are evolving rapidly, with skillsets changing 66 percent faster compared to other jobs. This is compelling organizations to continually upskill employees to stay competitive. Third, the report notes a democratization in job access, as fewer positions require university degrees and greater weight is placed on practical, demonstrable skills across all sectors—including traditionally non-technical fields such as mining, agriculture, and construction.
In Mexico, artificial intelligence adoption remains in its early phase but is already transforming the landscape. Demand for artificial intelligence skills grew at a 33.6 percent compound annual growth rate from 2021 to 2024, despite a pronounced slowdown in job postings in 2024 attributed to a softer overall labor market. The information and communications sector leads the integration, with an increase in artificial intelligence-skilled job postings from 2.2 percent in 2021 to 3.6 percent in 2024. Nationally, jobs with high artificial intelligence exposure expanded by 88 percent, and those linked specifically to generative artificial intelligence climbed by 84 percent in three years. The demand is not only for technical talent but also for leadership roles, with business leaders expected to champion and personally leverage artificial intelligence in innovation and strategy.
PwC’s report emphasizes that for Mexican businesses, integrating artificial intelligence is now a necessity to gain productivity, profitability, and competitive advantage. Companies that develop in-house talent, restructure teams, and engage leadership with artificial intelligence tools are best positioned for the next wave of digital-driven economic growth. The global case remains clear: value creation, moving forward, will rest on the synergy between advanced technology and human ingenuity.