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Future of Workpalantir

Palantir CEO says AI ‘will destroy’ humanities jobs, but there will be ‘more than enough jobs’ for people with vocational training

By
Jacqueline Munis
Jacqueline Munis
News Fellow
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By
Jacqueline Munis
Jacqueline Munis
News Fellow
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 11, 2026, 7:05 AM ET
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CEO of Palantir Technologies Alex Karp at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 20, 2026.Fabrice COFFRINI—AFP/Getty Images

Some economists and experts say critical thinking and creativity will be more important than ever in the age of artificial intelligence, when an LLM can do much of the heavy lifting in coding or research. Take Benjamin Shiller, the Brandeis economics professor who recently told Fortune a “weirdness premium” will be valued in the labor market of the future. Alex Karp, Palantir cofounder and CEO, isn’t one of these voices. 

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“It will destroy humanities jobs,” Karp said when asked how AI will affect jobs in conversation with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January. “You went to an elite school, and you studied philosophy—I’ll use myself as an example—hopefully, you have some other skill; that one is going to be hard to market.”

Karp attended Haverford College, a small, elite liberal arts college outside his hometown of Philadelphia. He earned a JD from Stanford Law School and a PhD in philosophy from Goethe University in Germany. He spoke about his own experience getting his first job. 

Of his own career, Karp told Fink that he remembered thinking: “I’m not sure who’s going to give me my first job.” 

The comments echoed past remarks Karp has made about certain types of elite college graduates who lack specialized skills.

“If you are the kind of person that would’ve gone to Yale, classically high IQ, and you have generalized knowledge, but it’s not specific, you’re effed,” Karp said in an interview with Axios in November. 

Palantir CEO Alex Karp: AI will devastate liberal arts careers. Here’s who he thinks will thrive

Karp recently expanded on his predictions for who is best prepared for the AI era.

“There are basically two ways to know you have a future,” the 58-year-old billionaire said on TBPN on March 12. “One, you have some vocational training. Or two, you’re neurodivergent.” Karp has credited his own dyslexia, a learning disability that can affect reading, writing, and information processing, for Palantir’s success. More broadly, neurodivergence can include conditions such as ADHD and autism. 

Karp also predicted large-scale disruption for humanities graduates, Democratic voters, and women.

“This technology disrupts humanities-trained, largely Democratic voters, and makes their economic power less, and increases the power, economic power [of] vocationally trained, working-class, often male voters, and … so, these disruptions are going to disrupt every aspect of our society,” he told CNBC.

Not every CEO agrees with Karp’s assessment that humanities graduates are doomed. BlackRock COO Robert Goldstein told Fortune in 2024 the company was recruiting graduates who studied “things that have nothing to do with finance or technology.” 

McKinsey global managing partner Bob Sternfels recently said in an interview with Harvard Business Review that the company is “looking more at liberal arts majors, whom we had deprioritized, as potential sources of creativity,” to break out of AI’s linear problem-solving. 

Karp has long been an advocate of vocational training over traditional college degrees. Last year, Palantir launched a Meritocracy Fellowship, offering high school students a paid internship with the chance to interview for a full-time position at the end of four months. 

The company criticized American universities for “indoctrinating” students and having “opaque” admissions that “displaced meritocracy and excellence,” in its announcement of the fellowship. 

“If you did not go to school, or you went to a school that’s not that great, or you went to Harvard or Princeton or Yale, once you come to Palantir, you’re a Palantirian—no one cares about the other stuff,” Karp said during a Q2 earnings call last year.

“I think we need different ways of testing aptitude,” Karp told Fink. He pointed to a former police officer who attended junior college, who now manages the U.S. Army’s Maven system, a Palantir-made AI tool that processes drone imagery and video.  

“In the past, the way we tested for aptitude would not have fully exposed how irreplaceable that person’s talents are,” he said. 

Karp also gave the example of technicians building batteries at a battery company, saying those workers are “very valuable if not irreplaceable because we can make them into something different than what they were very rapidly.”

He said what he does all day at Palantir is “figuring out what is someone’s outlier aptitude. Then I’m putting them on that thing and trying to get them to stay on that thing and not on the five other things they think they’re great at.” 

Karp’s comments come as more employers report a gap between the skills applicants are offering and what employers are looking for in a tough labor market. The unemployment rate for young workers ages 16 to 24 hit 10.4% in December and is growing among college graduates. Karp isn’t too worried, though. 

“There will be more than enough jobs for the citizens of your nation, especially those with vocational training,” he said. 

A version of this story was published on Fortune.com on Jan. 20, 2026.

More on the future of work:

  • Jack Dorsey and Roelof Botha think AI can make middle management obsolete.
  • Ford CEO Jim Farley says America is sleepwalking past its “essential economy” crisis.
  • Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s advice to workers scared of AI.
At the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit, Fortune 500 leaders will convene to explore the defining questions shaping the workforce of the future—delivering bold ideas, powerful connections, and actionable insights for building resilient organizations for the decade ahead. Join Fortune May 19–20 in Atlanta. Register now.
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