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About Event

AI systems are advancing rapidly and are increasingly capable of performing cognitive tasks that were previously the exclusive domain of human workers. As these technologies mature, they raise pressing questions about workforce displacement, the future of entry-level positions, and the overall structure of labour demand.

Engaging with these questions is essential. This panel brings together researchers and practitioners from labour economics, AI governance, and public policy to examine both the empirical evidence on AI's labour market effects and the policy tools available to governments.

The discussion will move across three broad themes:

- Diagnosis. What do we actually know so far about how AI is reshaping jobs, wages, and the structure of labour demand?

- Inequality. Who stands to gain and who stands to lose, and what does this mean for the distribution of work and income in Europe?

- Policy response. What are governments doing, what should they be doing, and how do tools like reskilling, social protection, and regulation fit together?

Format

18:00 - Doors open

18:30 - Introduction, moderated panel discussion, audience Q&A

20:00 - Networking reception with light refreshments

21:00 - Close

Moderator

Ole Teutloff is a researcher at the University of Oxford, where he studies how artificial intelligence is changing work and labour markets. Drawing on large-scale data and computational methods, his research sits at the intersection of technology, economics, and society.

Panel

Virginia Sondergeld is an Economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab, where she researches global labour market trends using Indeed's proprietary and other data, and leads all work on the DACH markets. Previously, Virginia wrote her PhD thesis in economics on the impact of women in management on labour-market and firm outcomes at DIW and the Free University of Berlin. In 2019, Virginia founded the non-profit organisation The Women in Economics Initiative, which she led for five years.

Catherine Schneider (she/her) is the Senior Policy Researcher for AI Workforce and Innovation at interface, where she focuses on global talent flows, innovation and inclusion. Prior to joining interface, Catherine worked at Mozilla on the Fellowships and Awards team, as well as the UN Refugee Agency, where she worked as an Associate Innovation Officer specialising in AI policy and research. She holds an MSc from the London School of Economics, where she focused on tech ethics and analysed the use of emerging technologies on refugee communities.

Ana Dujić is Director-General at the Federal Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, focusing on AI and digitalization's impact on work and shaping related legal frameworks on national, EU and international level. Previously, she headed the Strategy Division at the Ministry of Finance under Olaf Scholz. She also worked for seven years with President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, at the Foreign Office and as the head of the first Digitalization Policy Department at the Federal Presidential Office. Ana Dujić is a political scientist and studied in Munich and Paris.

Additional speakers to be announced.

About HAIPI

The Hertie AI Policy Initiative (HAIPI) is a student-led initiative at the Hertie School in Berlin. We organise public events on AI policy in Europe. More at hertieaipolicy.org

Questions: [email protected]

Location
Microsoft Berlin Office
Unter den Linden 17, 10117 Berlin, Germany
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