A lot of the commentary on AI and robotics in European and North American coverage circles nonetheless rests on a fear-laden assumption: new applied sciences will destroy jobs, and they’ll achieve this first and most decisively within the sectors which have traditionally absorbed labor at scale. Utilized to Africa, that argument turns into even darker. If manufacturing was the ladder that helped East Asia soak up employees and industrialize, then automation – the considering goes – might take away that ladder earlier than Africa has had the prospect to climb it.
However China’s 2026 Two Classes counsel a extra sophisticated image.
The message from Beijing this 12 months was not that China is retreating economically, however that it’s persevering with a managed transition. The 2026 Authorities Work Report set a progress goal of 4.5 to five p.c, whereas additionally focusing on greater than 12 million new city jobs and a surveyed city unemployment fee of round 5.5 p.c. It additionally laid out a clearer roadmap for constructing what policymakers describe as a brand new “clever economic system” – increasing using AI throughout key industries, accelerating its industrial utility at scale, supporting new AI-driven enterprise fashions, and strengthening information governance and regulatory frameworks.
On the similar time, the management reaffirmed its push in the direction of what it calls prime quality productive forces: progress pushed by AI, semiconductors, robotics, inexperienced vitality and different higher-value sectors. Nonetheless, and curiously, China’s employment authorities signaled that AI wouldn’t solely displace (some) employees however might additionally create new jobs and improve conventional ones. That’s already a extra nuanced framing than the blunt declare that AI merely destroys work.
That nuance issues as a result of the labor market actuality in China already seems far messier than the usual automation narrative suggests. China’s city surveyed unemployment fee averaged 5.2 p.c in 2025, and the economic system created practically 13 million new city jobs. But stress amongst youthful folks stays intense: China is anticipating practically 13 million faculty graduates in 2026, whereas youth unemployment in city areas has remained round 16 p.c. In different phrases, China is concurrently producing jobs whereas producing deep nervousness amongst graduates about the place they slot in an economic system being reshaped by AI.
What is particularly putting is that though everyone knows that routine cognitive work – information processing, primary evaluation, administrative help, and customer support – is more and more susceptible to automation, a few of the earliest and loudest nervousness in China just isn’t solely about entry-level or menial work. Additionally it is about artistic and communications work.
Chinese language graphic designers have already described how AI instruments are altering consumer expectations round pace, value, and worth. AI-powered digital salespeople now function across the clock in livestream commerce, pushing into presenter-style roles that after appeared safely human. Even performers are a part of the nervousness: actor and political adviser Jin Dong publicly referred to as for tighter regulation after AI-generated impersonations of him have been used to rip-off followers. So, the priority in China just isn’t merely that AI might exchange probably the most repetitive work. It’s that it might transfer surprisingly shortly into design, promoting, media, and performance-adjacent roles.
On the similar time, components of China’s industrial economic system are nonetheless struggling to seek out the employees they want. Official projections have warned of a shortfall of round 30 million expert employees in key manufacturing sectors, whereas greater than 70 p.c of latest frontline employees in fashionable manufacturing, strategic rising industries, and fashionable providers are actually graduates of vocational faculties.
The upshot: China just isn’t dealing with a neat story of machines changing employees wholesale. It’s dealing with a mismatch – an excessive amount of stress in some components of the labor market, and too little labor in others. Factories are struggling to seek out employees even whereas college graduate and white-collar nervousness rises.
On the similar time, the present resilience of bodily labor shouldn’t be romanticized. The humanoid robots showcased throughout China’s 2026 Spring Competition Gala have been a vivid reminder of how shortly robotics is advancing. The purpose just isn’t that manufacturing facility work is protected. It’s that the timeline is uneven, maybe advancing quicker than anticipated, and it’s complicated – even in extremely state-led economies like China. For now, some bodily duties stay more durable to automate at scale than many cognitive and artistic ones. However that will not final.
That is the place the African angle turns into so necessary. Africa’s labor market problem – in addition to levers for response – just isn’t the identical as China’s. Over the following three many years, the continent is predicted to see a internet improve of about 740 million folks in its working-age inhabitants. As much as 12 million younger folks enter African labor markets annually, but solely about 3 million new formal wage jobs are presently created yearly. In South Africa alone, youth unemployment within the first quarter of 2025 stood at 46 p.c for these aged 15 to 34, and 62 p.c for these aged 15 to 24. In different phrases, Africa’s defining employment drawback just isn’t labor shortage. It’s job creation at extraordinary scale.
That’s exactly why importing the simplistic AI narrative – particularly that from Europe and North America – could be a mistake. Whereas China nonetheless has a protracted strategy to go, its expertise to date means that automation doesn’t transfer in a single path, at one pace, or by one class of jobs. It could possibly squeeze graduate and artistic work even whereas components of producing nonetheless want employees. It could possibly shift the stress from manufacturing facility flooring to workplace desks, from routine administration to design studios, from handbook repetition to communications and efficiency roles.
For Africa, the place casual work, uneven infrastructure and really totally different sectoral buildings form adoption, the query is due to this fact not whether or not AI will likely be good or dangerous for jobs within the summary. The true query is which jobs are in danger, wherein sectors, beneath what circumstances, and with what coverage response. In lots of African contexts, AI might initially increase labor in agriculture, logistics, providers, and small enterprise greater than it replaces it.
Classes gleaned from China’s Two Classes due to this fact counsel three main priorities for African policymakers.
First, construct and spend money on sector-specific AI methods. The results of AI on agriculture, logistics, enterprise providers, manufacturing, retail, and artistic work is not going to be the identical. Governments and traders want sharper evaluation of the place AI is more likely to complement employees, the place it might displace them, and the place it might create totally new types of work. This may be executed on the continental stage or regional stage by organizations such because the AFCFTA Secretariat or AUDA-NEPAD, or the Regional Financial Communities.
Second, governments should spend money on the foundations that permit expertise to lift productiveness with out deepening exclusion. Meaning dependable energy, higher connectivity, digital public infrastructure, and stronger technical and vocational coaching programs. If China’s expertise tells us something, it’s that labor market disruption is usually a abilities and matching drawback as a lot as a expertise drawback.
Third, policymakers ought to acknowledge that AI just isn’t solely a standalone sector, however an enabling layer remodeling how work is completed throughout the economic system. In China, it’s already embedded throughout sectors similar to schooling, advertising and marketing, e-commerce, and finance: automating duties whereas augmenting decision-making and content material creation. This diffusion is reducing limitations to entry, permitting employees with out technical backgrounds to have interaction with AI-enabled instruments. For Africa, this creates a broader entry level into the AI economic system, but in addition raises the baseline: AI literacy is changing into a core ability throughout occupations. Policymakers ought to due to this fact help sensible, tool-based coaching throughout schooling and early-career pathways, whereas avoiding the notion that AI-assisted work is inherently complicated or inaccessible.
Governments should preserve job creation on the middle of AI coverage. The objective shouldn’t be technological adoption for its personal sake. It must be adoption that helps companies that rent at scale, raises productiveness in labor-absorbing sectors, and protects employees and creators by clear guidelines on labelling, mental property and deepfakes. Industrial coverage, digital coverage and labor coverage have to be joined up from the beginning.
That’s the lesson African policymakers ought to take from China’s Two Classes. The manufacturing path to absorbing labor is beneath stress, sure. However it isn’t merely closed. Extra importantly, the labor market results of AI and robotics are proving way more complicated than the commonest public narratives permit. For Africa, the chance just isn’t solely technological disruption itself. It’s getting ready for the incorrect form of disruption as a result of the prognosis was too simplistic within the first place.
