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In Ireland, AI-exposed roles have almost doubled since 2019, PwC report says.
A new PwC report finds that jobs exposed to artificial intelligence (AI) grew by nearly 40pc despite risks from the tech.
The firm’s latest Global AI Jobs Barometer analysed nearly 1bn job ads from across the world and stated that AI is making employees more valuable, productive and capable of commanding higher wages.
According to the report, Irish wages are growing twice as fast in industries more exposed to AI, as opposed to less exposed. AI-skilled workers saw a wage premium of 56pc on average last year – doubling from 25pc the year before.
Business productivity has nearly quadrupled since generative AI (GenAI) began speedily proliferating throughout industries such as finance, software and publishing in 2022, PwC says.
While in contrast, productivity growth declined in sectors less exposed to AI, such as mining and hospitality.
As a result, employees skilled in AI are bringing higher revenue to their workplace. The PwC report finds that industries most exposed to AI saw three-times higher growth in revenue per employee last year.
“AI is amplifying and democratising expertise, enabling employees to multiply their impact and focus on higher-level responsibilities,” said Laoise Mullane, director of workforce consulting at PwC Ireland.
“With the right foundations, both companies and workers can re-define their roles and industries and emerge leaders in their field, particularly as the full gambit of applications becomes clearer.”
However, occupations less exposed to AI saw stronger job growth at 65pc, when compared to more exposed sectors. Still, the growth of AI-exposed roles exceeds expectations at 38pc, finds PwC.
Moreover, jobs that require AI skills continue to grow faster than all jobs – rising 7.5pc from last year, even as total job postings fell by 11.3pc.
In Ireland, the study finds that job numbers in AI-exposed occupations have grown by nearly 94pc since 2019. There is also a higher demand for AI-related skills.
PwC says that this transformation means that workers need to reskill and upskill more frequently.
Stemming from this report, PwC recommends that businesses see AI as a tool for enterprise-wide transformation and treat the technology as a growth strategy and not just an efficiency strategy.
“In Ireland we are also seeing the productivity prize from AI. PwC’s 2025 Irish CEO survey showed that 44pc of Irish CEOs reported AI had increased efficiencies in their employees’ time at work in the last 12 months,” said Gerard McDonough, a partner at PwC Ireland.
“However, to reach full potential, close attention needs to be given to skills enhancement. PwC’s Irish 2025 GenAI Business Leaders survey revealed that 73pc of Irish business leaders are of the view that AI will require most of their workforce to develop new skills.”
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