AI, work, & dignity: Why the future of labour is a question of justice
June 5, 2026
  • Read Ecopy
  • Circulation
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Android AppiPhone AppArattai
Organiser
  • ‌
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
    • Africa
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • International
  • Opinion
  • RSS @ 100
  • More
    • Op Sindoor
    • Analysis
    • Sports
    • Defence
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Culture
    • Special Report
    • Sci & Tech
    • Entertainment
    • G20
    • Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav
    • Vocal4Local
    • Web Stories
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Law
    • Health
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe Print Edition
    • Subscribe Ecopy
    • Read Ecopy
  • ‌
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
    • Africa
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • International
  • Opinion
  • RSS @ 100
  • More
    • Op Sindoor
    • Analysis
    • Sports
    • Defence
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Culture
    • Special Report
    • Sci & Tech
    • Entertainment
    • G20
    • Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav
    • Vocal4Local
    • Web Stories
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Law
    • Health
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe Print Edition
    • Subscribe Ecopy
    • Read Ecopy
Organiser
  • Home
  • Bharat
  • World
  • Operation Sindoor
  • Editorial
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Defence
  • International Edition
  • RSS @ 100
  • Magazine
  • Read Ecopy
Home Bharat

AI, work, and dignity: Why the future of labour is a question of justice, not hours

The rise of AI exposes that changing work metrics from hours to outcomes means little unless power imbalances, worker dignity, and fair sharing of productivity gains are addressed

Virjesh UpadhyayVirjesh Upadhyay
Dec 24, 2025, 09:00 pm IST
in Bharat
Follow on Google News
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppTelegramEmail

The renewed debate over work hours in the age of artificial intelligence, sparked by arguments that “hours worked” are an outdated performance metric, appears progressive at first glance. Yet, beneath this managerial conversation lies a far deeper concern: what happens to the meaning, dignity, and fairness of work when technology accelerates productivity but power equations remain unchanged?

AI was expected to liberate human beings from drudgery. Instead, in many workplaces, it has quietly intensified expectations. Tasks are completed faster, deadlines shrink, and performance bars keep rising. The result is a paradox: machines save time, but humans seem to have less of it.

This is not a failure of technology. It is a failure of economic and organisational philosophy. Hours are a Crude Metric, but outcomes alone are risky.

Critiquing work hours as a performance indicator is valid. Time spent at a desk does not equal value created. However, replacing hours with “outcomes” without safeguards can be even more dangerous, especially for workers with weak bargaining power.

India’s informal, gig, and contract workers already live in an outcome-based world: paid per delivery, per task, per piece. For them, outcome metrics have meant:

  • Invisible effort
  • No recognition of fatigue or learning time
  • Transfer of all risk from the employer to the worker
  • In such contexts, outcome-based performance becomes digital piece-rate labour, not empowerment.

Historically, labour movements fought for limits on hours not to glorify inefficiency, but to protect human life from being reduced to a commodity. Abandoning this hard-won wisdom in the name of AI-driven efficiency would be a serious regression.

Work Is Not a Burden to Be Minimised

A seductive narrative accompanies AI optimism: machines will work so humans don’t have to. This idea is profoundly flawed. Work is not merely a means of survival. It is:

  • A source of dignity and self-worth
  • A way of contributing to society
  • A foundation of social identity

A future where work becomes “optional” for the many, while ownership of technology—and therefore power—rests with a few, does not lead to liberation. It leads to dependence, loss of agency, and social fragility.
The real goal should not be less work, but better work.

AI Should Civilize Work, Not Erase It

From a worker-centric perspective, AI must be judged by a simple moral test:

Does it strengthen the worker’s dignity and bargaining power—or weaken it? Used wisely, AI can:

  • Reduce physical and mental drudgery
  • Improve safety and health
  • Enhance skills and decision-making
  • Used poorly, it becomes a tool for surveillance, work intensification, and silent exploitation—regardless of whether performance is measured in hours or outcomes.
  • Changing metrics without changing power relations changes nothing.
  • The Indian Reality Cannot Be Ignored
  • For most Indian workers, the debate is not about long office hours versus flexible schedules. It is about:
  • Low and uncertain incomes
  • Absence of social security
  • Lack of collective voice

Importing elite global discussions on four-day workweeks or productivity dashboards without addressing these fundamentals risks becoming a conversation among the privileged, about the unprivileged, without them.

The Right Question

The age of AI forces society to confront uncomfortable truths. The correct questions are not:

  • How many hours should people work?
  • How do we redefine performance metrics?

The real questions are:

  • What kind of work sustains human dignity?
  • Who controls technology and who benefits from its gains?
  • How are productivity gains shared between capital and labour?

Until these are answered, debates on hours versus outcomes will remain cosmetic. And:

  • AI does not make labour obsolete.
  • It exposes the ethical choices of our economic system.

If machines advance and human lives become more insecure, the problem is not technology; it is justice.
If productivity rises and dignity falls, the crisis is not about efficiency; it is about values. The future of work is not about working more or working less. It is about working right.

Topics: Artificial IntelligenceaiJusticeWorker dignityWork hours
ShareTweetSendShareSend
✮ Subscribe Organiser YouTube Channel. ✮
✮ Join Organiser's WhatsApp channel for Nationalist views beyond the news. ✮
Previous News

Atal Modi Suparipalana Yatra: Andhra Pradesh’s tribute to a timeless statesman

Next News

Is Christmas a copy of Hindu festivals?

Related News

Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal’s Canada visit reflected India’s larger strategy to secure technology partnerships, strategic resources and a stronger position in the future global economy

AI, Trade and Critical Minerals: The bigger message behind Piyush Goyal’s Canada visit

RSS Sarsanghchalak Dr Mohan Bhagwat

RSS sarsanghchalak Dr Bhagwat urges Swayamsevaks to be aware of global developments, calls to utilise AI positively

Representative Image

Bharat’s tech future will be defined by AI, semiconductors and Nari Shakti

Representative Image (This image is generated by AI)

Uttar Pradesh: Rs 368 crore AI City project to transform Lucknow’s tech landscape

CM Mohan Charan Majhi along with Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw during the ground-breaking ceremony of the Heterogeneous Integration Packaging Solutions (3DGS) project at Info Valley.

Odisha hosts groundbreaking India’s 1st advanced 3D semiconductor packaging unit; Major boost to AI, 5G & Defence Tech

Dignitaries on the stage at lecture on the theme “National Ownership in Science: The Struggles of Indian Scientists” organised at Barkatullah University

Indian scientific perspective holds the key to solve modern technological challenges: J Nandakumar

Load More

Latest News

Union Home Minister Amit Shah addressing BSF personnel at the Lankamura Border Outpost along the India-Bangladesh border in West Tripura district on June 5, 2026

Amit Shah at Bangladesh Border: “India will have an impregnable security grid soon”

India slams Pakistan’s bid to hold elections in Gilgit-Baltistan, demands end to illegal occupation

Maharashtra government approves central wage structure for Pune Metro Contract Workers; Major victory for BMS

India seals robust 7.7% GDP Growth in FY26: Reflects economic resilience amid West Asia crisis & other global headwinds

A representative image

After TCS, Corporate Jihad allegations reach SBI: Married Hindu employee conversion claims trigger FIR in Mumbai

MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal highlights India's resolve to deport illegal Bangladeshi migrants via bilateral mechanisms

India reiterates strong resolve to deport illegal Bangladeshis; Flags delay of bilateral procedures from Dhaka

Kerala HC rejects CMRL appeal, clears way for ED probe against Pinarayi Vijayan’s daughter in money laundering case

Uttar Pradesh leads in Bharat's green transformation

World Environment Day 2026: On his birthday, Yogi Adityanath’s green vision powers Uttar Pradesh’s transformation

As Khalistani networks seek new platforms beyond the West, Azerbaijan has emerged as a key venue for conferences, campaigns and narratives aligned with the Pakistan-Turkey axis against India.

Khalistan’s New Grazing Ground: Azerbaijan emerges as new hub for Turkey-Pakistan backed anti-India networks

Kochi IPL Mystery: Why Did Sunanda Pushkar Surrender Stake Amid Benami Claims Tied to Shashi Tharoor, Sonia Gandhi?

Kochi IPL Mystery: Why Did Sunanda Pushkar Surrender Stake Amid Benami Claims Tied to Shashi Tharoor, Sonia Gandhi?

Load More
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Cookie Policy
  • Refund and Cancellation
  • Delivery and Shipping

© Bharat Prakashan (Delhi) Limited.
Tech-enabled by Ananthapuri Technologies

  • Home
  • Search Organiser
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • South America
    • Europe
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • Operation Sindoor
  • Opinion
  • Analysis
  • Defence
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Business
  • RSS @ 100
  • Entertainment
  • More ..
    • Sci & Tech
    • Vocal4Local
    • Special Report
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Law
    • Economy
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe Magazine
  • Read Ecopy
  • Advertise
  • Circulation
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Policies & Terms
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Refund and Cancellation
    • Terms of Use

© Bharat Prakashan (Delhi) Limited.
Tech-enabled by Ananthapuri Technologies