Prometheus co-founder Jeff Bezos warns AI may create labor shortages

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Jeff Bezos has a message for anyone worried about robots stealing their job: you’ve got it backwards.

Speaking at the VivaTech technology conference in Paris on June 17, the Amazon founder and co-CEO of AI startup Prometheus argued that artificial intelligence will create a shortage of labor, not a surplus of unemployed humans.

The case for fewer workers, not fewer jobs

Bezos was responding to a question from former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino about integrating Prometheus technology with Blue Origin’s engineering operations. His answer pivoted to what he sees as a fundamental misunderstanding about AI’s economic impact.

“I totally disagree with this point of view. And I think, in fact, AI is going to create a labor shortage.”

The logic, as Bezos frames it, works like this: AI makes workers so productive that living standards rise significantly. When living standards rise, people voluntarily choose to work less. Dual-income families might become single-earner households again. Overtime becomes optional rather than necessary. The net effect is fewer available labor hours chasing the same amount of work.

Prometheus and the $41 billion bet on physical AI

Prometheus, which Bezos co-founded in November 2025, just closed a $12 billion Series B round that values the company at $41 billion. Total funding has surpassed $18 billion since launch.

The investor list includes JPMorgan, BlackRock, and Goldman Sachs. The company currently employs around 150 people across offices in San Francisco, London, and Zurich.

Prometheus describes its focus as “physical AI,” technology designed to revolutionize the design and manufacturing of complex physical products such as jet engines and spacecraft.

What this means for crypto and digital asset markets

Prometheus has zero connection to cryptocurrency, blockchain, or digital assets. No token launches, no decentralized manufacturing protocols, no Web3 integration.

The capital flowing into AI startups like Prometheus represents a gravitational pull on institutional money. When JPMorgan and BlackRock are writing checks for $12 billion rounds in AI manufacturing companies, that’s capital that isn’t flowing into digital asset funds, tokenized securities, or blockchain infrastructure.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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