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A new OpenAI report maps how AI could reshape jobs across the EU, highlighting which occupations may face automation, growth, or workflow changes.
How the EU’s mix of occupations and institutions can shape where AI supports growth, redesigns work, and encourages adaptation
AI capabilities can cross borders quickly. Jobs do not change in such a frictionless way. Work is shaped by licensing systems, local institutions, and the practical realities of delivering care, education, justice, public services, and other forms of human support. These systems matter because they help determine if and how AI changes the labor market. What will AI’s labor market impact be? Where will the impacts be felt most and when? And how can we ensure that the AI transition works for everyone?
These are the questions at the center of OpenAI Economic Research's new report, The AI Jobs Transition Framework for the EU. The report extends the AI Jobs Transition Framework(opens in a new window), first developed for the United States in April 2026, to the European labor market. It uses the official European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations (“ESCO”) taxonomy, along with Eurostat employment data, to examine how AI capabilities may translate into different kinds of near-term occupational change across EU member states. Compared with the U.S., the EU has a smaller share of employment in occupations with higher near-term automation potential.
The framework identifies four transition archetypes: occupations that may grow with AI, occupations at higher automation potential, occupations likely to reorganize, and occupations with less immediate change. These categories are not employment forecasts. They are a planning map for where different kinds of adjustment pressure and opportunity may emerge.
Applied to the EU, the framework suggests that AI may increase demand in some occupations, reduce labor needs in others, and reorganize many more:
The report shows that country-level patterns vary across the EU. Luxembourg, Sweden, and the Netherlands have larger shares in occupations that may grow with AI. Germany, Greece, and Italy have larger employment shares in occupations classified as higher automation potential. These differences reflect differences in the occupational structure across countries.
