'Purpose Of Life Not Just To Do Jobs': Bill Gates Says AI Might Make 2-Day Workweek A Reality Soon
A future where your workweek only spans two or three days? Bill Gates believes it’s not just a fantasy, but a very real possibility within the next decade — and Artificial Intelligence could be the catalyst that makes it happen.
Appearing on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, the Microsoft co-founder predicted that rapidly advancing AI technologies will eventually render humans unnecessary “for most things.” That, he said, could pave the way for drastically shorter workweeks.
“What will jobs be like? Should we just work like 2 or 3 days a week?” Gates asked during his appearance.
“At the current pace of innovation in AI,” he added, such a shift might soon be inevitable.
A long-time advocate of less work, more purpose
Gates has long been vocal about AI’s potential to transform not just industries but the way people live and work. Back in 2023, at a time when tools like ChatGPT were just gaining momentum, he suggested that a three-day workweek might become the norm.
In a conversation with Trevor Noah on the What Now? podcast, Gates elaborated:
“If you zoom out, the purpose of life is not just to do jobs,” he said, encouraging a broader reflection on how society could use freed-up time more meaningfully.
Indian leaders push back with longer-hour mantras
While Gates’ vision evokes images of a leisurely, AI-optimised lifestyle, it contrasts sharply with the views of several prominent Indian business leaders who champion longer work hours as a means to national progress.
Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy stirred debate when he recently said Indians should aim to work 70 hours a week to compete globally. He did clarify that it was a suggestion, not a mandate.
L&T Chairman SN Subrahmanyan, in a resurfaced video, went even further, expressing regret over not pushing employees to work Sundays and advocating for a 90-hour workweek. Unsurprisingly, the remarks drew widespread criticism.
Other global voices echo Gates’ optimism
Gates isn’t alone in anticipating a shorter workweek revolution. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon recently commented that AI could usher in a three-and-a-half-day workweek — a move he believes is feasible given the acceleration of automation.
Japan appears to be experimenting with this idea in real-time. Tokyo’s Metropolitan Government recently introduced a four-day workweek policy, though its main goal is to boost the country’s declining birth rate, rather than reduce burnout.
As more companies explore AI adoption and workers grapple with stress and fatigue, Gates’ projection of a radically redefined work-life balance may be closer than most expect — even if the world isn’t entirely on the same page just yet.
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