THEME OF THE WEEK
AI is splitting the labor market into two tracks -- and the workers who thrive will be those who pair human judgment with continuous reskilling, regardless of age.
WEEK IN LONGEVITY SNAPSHOT
This week revealed a labor market cleaving into two distinct paths under AI pressure. PwC's landmark analysis of one billion job ads confirmed that roles emphasizing human judgment are pulling away from those AI can democratize -- a divide with profound implications for older workers whose experience becomes a competitive asset. Meanwhile, the reskilling imperative intensified as Gartner warned that AI will break down millions of careers even as it creates net new roles. And at the margins of this workforce upheaval, new healthspan research from Leiden University and a sweeping meta-analysis on social isolation reminded us that the 100-year life demands not just economic redesign but deeper investment in the biological and social foundations of healthy aging.
THIS WEEK'S HIGHLIGHT
PwC's 2026 Global AI Jobs Barometer -- the largest study of its kind, spanning one billion job advertisements across 27 countries -- found that AI is forging a two-track labor market. Professionalised roles, where AI automates routine tasks and elevates the value of human judgment, creativity, and leadership, grow at twice the rate of democratised roles, where AI makes the work accessible to non-experts. Salary growth in professionalised roles outpaces democratised ones by 42%. For longevity leaders, this is the most consequential workforce signal of 2026: experienced workers who can exercise judgment, mentor teams, and navigate ambiguity hold exactly the skills AI rewards most.