AI and Worker Well-being: Evidence from a Nationally Representative Study

Abstract

Utilizing nationally representative cross-sectional and longitudinal data from Finland (2018–2023), we provide a population-level assessment of the relationship between AI and worker well-being. Contrary to international evidence suggesting a positive or an inverted U-shaped relationship, we find no systematic association between AI use intensity and job satisfaction. However, we do find that work engagement is higher among employees who are personally involved with AI, with the strongest association among intensive users for whom AI is an essential part of their work. Furthermore, technology-replacement fears have remained stable despite rapid AI advancement and do not predict subsequent labour market transitions. An interpretation is that Finland’s high-trust institutional environment and robust social safety nets may effectively moderate the disruptive psychological and economic shocks typically associated with rapid technological change.

Publication info

Results of research
Charting the change: innovations, wellbeing and economic transformations (Cartagena)
Research group
Macroeconomy and public finances
Series
ETLA Working Papers 137
Date
07.04.2026
Keywords
Artificial intelligence, Job satisfaction, Work engagement, Technology-related fears, Labour market transitions
ISSN
2323-2420, 2323-2439 (Pdf)
JEL
J28, L23
Pages
36
Language
English