The Double Disadvantage: AI, Women, and the Future of Work

Episode 540 | Author: Emilie Aries

As the AI economy transforms the future of work, women are being left behind.

AI is rocking the workforce, and there’s a long line of op-eds and in-depth research exploring the many impacts coming our way. But despite all the press, one topic I don’t see discussed enough is the inequity embedded in this workforce revolution. The people who are deciding how AI will impact our futures aren’t including all the voices at the table.

Women, in particular, are facing what I call a double disadvantage when it comes to the AI economy. That two-fold obstacle—and all the factors surrounding it—is what I want to break down today.

The first disadvantage: women’s jobs are being more exposed to AI automation

In 2025, the UN’s International Labour Organization analyzed nearly 30,000 real-world tasks in order to identify which jobs are most exposed to generative AI takeovers. The findings are stark: in high-income countries, the careers women have are almost three times as likely to fall into the “high-risk of AI automation” category as those predominantly held by men. 

Specifically, 9.6% of women’s jobs are likely to be replaced by AI, compared to just 3.5% of men’s jobs. The reason is pretty simple. Today’s generative AI is really good at the kinds of jobs women are more likely to hold: knowledge economy jobs that focus on cognitive, language-based work, such as HR administration, clerical tasks, bookkeeping, and so on. 

Men are predicted to be less affected by the coming shifts because they’re more evenly distributed between these jobs and the kind of manual, blue-collar labor that’s hard to replicate with technology. That is, of course, not to dismiss the fact that even those jobs have been disappearing and changing for decades due to advancements in automation. 

In early March, Anthropic, the creator of Claude AI, released a new report looking at the tasks people are actually using AI for. Based on that analysis, it posits that at-risk workers are more likely to be female, educated, and higher paid because it isn’t just the entry-level work that AI is replacing—it’s the professional roles we’ve spent decades building careers around. While there has yet to be any immediate spike in unemployment, the study did find that the hiring of younger workers in these occupations has already begun to decline.

The second disadvantage: the opportunities benefit men

Like most seismic economic shifts, there’s some good news that accompanies the bad when it comes to the AI economy. Unfortunately, the “good” here isn’t all that egalitarian. AI is certainly creating new jobs even as it replaces others. Machine learning engineering, data science, and the like are well-paid, fast-growing career paths…but they are disproportionately going to men. As of 2025, women make up only 22% of the global AI workforce. In senior positions, that percentage drops to just 14.

Another layer: the learning gap

There’s an admittedly tarnished silver lining here: there is an aspect of all this that we can control: educating ourselves on what AI is capable of and how it can help us stay relevant in our workplaces.

In 2024, Harvard Business School synthesized 18 studies encompassing 140,000 individuals around the world and found that women adopt AI tools at a 25% lower rate than men, even when access is equalized. 

Three main trends drive this:

  • Women self-assess as less familiar with and confident in the use of AI.

  • They are more likely to see using AI tools as “cheating” or taking a shortcut. This is hardly surprising, and the study acknowledges that women historically face greater penalties for being seen as not having competence. They are therefore more driven to prove their worth and show their work.

  • Women consistently rate concerns about AI ethics higher than men. They’re worried about things like accountability, transparency, and bias; they’re asking harder questions about environmental impacts and reliability, and understandably so.

While these reasons are completely valid and we should be asking more questions rather than blindly adopting such powerful technology, I’m of the opinion that we need to keep learning how AI works and how it can work for us. Otherwise, men are going to keep capturing all the productivity benefits, and women will be left behind.

To be clear, I think we must absolutely continue to express concern: push for more regulation and transparency. But at the same time, start learning. Not only does voicing detraction from an educated standpoint have more weight, but you’ll be elevating your career prospects at the same time.

How to prepare for the AI economy

“Start learning how to use AI” is easier said than done. With that in mind, I just released a completely updated LinkedIn Learning course, Get Unstuck, packed with AI prompts and interactive tools to help you explore how a large language model (LLM) could be your very own career coach. 

This is just one example of how we can start using AI to help us advocate for ourselves rather than letting it replace us.

What you can do

Start taking control of AI’s role in your life! First off, begin playing around with tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, among others. A lot of articles recommend using them to meal plan and put together your grocery list. Go for it, if you want, but I’d encourage you to focus on work-centric ways it can boost your productivity and take things off your plate. More and more, the labor market and economy are looking for people strong in workflow systems, so find your strengths and outsource what you can, while staying within your workplace’s security policies, of course.

Start doing what you can to get yourself in the room where the decisions about AI in your workplace are being made. Odds are, these changes are already underway, and your voice deserves to be heard.

What organizations can do

Number one: Stop treating AI strategy and people strategy like two different things. If you’re looking to incorporate AI into existing human roles in your company, the absolute best people to help you figure out the most efficient way are the people in those roles right now. As the studies show, those people are usually highly educated women in senior positions. If you’re interested in business continuity—and what revenue-minded company isn’t?—you need their input in the transition.

Second, set really clear expectations about AI use at your company. Research shows that women are less likely to break the rules than men, so without explicit guidance, they’ll probably hang back while the men dive in. If AI at work is encouraged, make sure everyone knows it.

And third, audit your AI tools for biases. A 2024 Deloitte study of AI systems, like those used for HR, voice recognition, and financial services, found that 44% exhibited gender bias. If you’re using AI for performance reviews, hiring, or training, make sure it isn’t perpetuating algorithmic injustice.

What policymakers can do

As I said at the top, there is a dearth of diversity in the voices making the big decisions on AI. Because of this, glaring issues are slipping through the gaping cracks. New policies for AI need to demand transparency, especially when the tools are being used to make decisions that impact people’s livelihoods: employment, housing, healthcare, and so on. 

Colorado is once again leading the charge on this, with an AI anti-discrimination law on the books (though implementation is currently delayed). Since then, at least a couple of other states have followed suit. 

Right now, AI is shaping the future of work - and the new economy we all have to live with, so we need to figure out how to be a part of it. A few months ago, Tressie McMillan Cottom spoke at the Urban Consulate about our right to refuse a future where humans are treated inhumanely. She stresses that we don’t have to accept what’s laid out as inevitable. Instead, we need to actively shape what that future will look like.

That’s what Bossed Up has always been about, and I will continue to share ways you can shift, without giving in, as everything changes around you. Keep asking hard questions, keep learning, and keep tuning in!

What’s your take on how you factor into the AI revolution? Are you an early adoptor or a vocal critic (or both)? When you’ve done your chatbot reconnaissance, come on over to the Courage Community on Facebook or join us in our group on LinkedIn to share your findings and feelings with real women tackling the same urgent issue.

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

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