Theseus: coordination infrastructure + conviction schema + labor market claims 11 claims covering: Knuth's Claude's Cycles research program, Aquino-Michaels orchestrator pattern, Reitbauer alternative approach, Anthropic labor market impacts, and coordination infrastructure (coordinate.md, handoff protocol, conviction schema). Reviewed by Leo. Conflicts resolved. Pentagon-Agent: Leo <B9E87C91-8D2A-42C0-AA43-4874B1A67642>
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The demographic profile of AI-exposed workers — 16pp more female, 47% higher earnings, 4x graduate degrees — is the opposite of prior automation waves that hit low-skill workers first. | likely | Massenkoff & McCrory 2026, Current Population Survey baseline Aug-Oct 2022 | 2026-03-08 |
AI-exposed workers are disproportionately female high-earning and highly educated which inverts historical automation patterns and creates different political and economic displacement dynamics
Massenkoff & McCrory (2026) profile the demographic characteristics of workers in AI-exposed occupations using pre-ChatGPT baseline data (August-October 2022). The exposed cohort is:
- 16 percentage points more likely to be female than the unexposed cohort
- Earning 47% higher average wages
- Four times more likely to hold a graduate degree (17.4% vs 4.5%)
This is the opposite of every prior automation wave. Manufacturing automation hit low-skill, predominantly male, lower-earning workers. AI automation targets the knowledge economy — the educated, well-paid professional class that has been insulated from technological displacement for decades.
The implications are structural, not just demographic:
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Economic multiplier: High earners drive disproportionate consumer spending. Displacement of a $150K white-collar worker has larger consumption ripple effects than displacement of a $40K manufacturing worker.
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Political response: This demographic votes, donates, and has institutional access. The political response to white-collar displacement will be faster and louder than the response to manufacturing displacement was.
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Gender dimension: A displacement wave that disproportionately affects women will intersect with existing gender equality dynamics in unpredictable ways.
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Education mismatch: Graduate degrees were the historical hedge against automation. If AI displaces graduate-educated workers, the entire "upskill to stay relevant" narrative collapses.
Relevant Notes:
- white-collar displacement has lagged but deeper consumption impact than blue-collar because top-decile earners drive disproportionate consumer spending and their savings buffers mask the damage for quarters — the economic multiplier effect
- AI labor displacement operates as a self-funding feedback loop because companies substitute AI for labor as OpEx not CapEx meaning falling aggregate demand does not slow AI adoption — why displacement doesn't self-correct
- nation-states will inevitably assert control over frontier AI development because the monopoly on force is the foundational state function and weapons-grade AI capability in private hands is structurally intolerable to governments — the political response vector
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