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Efosa Udinmwen

'A career can be just as strong in these fields of plumbing and electricians': Blackrock boss says getting an AI job shouldn't be the end goal for everyone

Smb security.

  • BlackRock CEO says society overvalued office jobs while undervaluing skilled trades for decades
  • Electricians, plumbers, and welders will see strong demand from AI growth
  • Energy costs remain the biggest obstacle to expanding AI infrastructure globally

The Chairman and CEO of the world’s largest asset manager, Blackrock, has suggested that society’s obsession with white-collar careers has gone too far, arguing such skilled trades deserve the same respect as professions such as banking or law.

Larry Fink, who co-founded Blackrock in 1988 and now oversees $14 trillion in assets, told the BBC the United States “overdid” its push for young people to attend university while undervaluing jobs that require working with one’s hands.

Fink's comments come as artificial intelligence reshapes the labor market, with the AI boom expected to create enormous demand for electricians, welders, and plumbers, even as some office roles face an uncertain future.

A rebalancing of social status

Fink pointed to cultural portrayals that have long shaped perceptions of different careers, noting that television often depicts the average plumber in unflattering ways, while investment bankers receive glamorous treatment in popular dramas.

“I think what we did wrong,” he said, “we really put judgment on so many jobs and so many people who probably should not have gone into banking or media or law, probably should have been great workers with their hands, and we need to now rebalance that approach.”

Fink emphasized a career in plumbing or electrical work can be just as strong and fulfilling as any office job, and that society needs to be proud of those fields rather than treating them as fallback options.

Beyond the shifting job market, Fink warned that the expansion of artificial intelligence faces a fundamental constraint: the energy costs required to power it.

He observed while China is investing heavily in solar and nuclear power, Europe is characterized by “a lot of talk and no action” on the energy front.

In the United States, despite being energy independent, he argued that policymakers must focus more on solar development to ensure cheap power is available for AI infrastructure.

Blackrock itself has placed a major bet on this sector, having joined a consortium last year to acquire Aligned Data Centres, one of the world’s largest data center providers, in a $40 billion deal.

The Blackrock chief also addressed the economic implications of the US-Israel war with Iran, describing two possible scenarios with starkly different outcomes.

If the conflict is resolved and Iran is reintegrated into the international community, oil prices could fall below pre-war levels.

If not, however, he predicted “years of above $100, closer to $150 oil,” which would carry “profound implications” for the global economy and could trigger “a probably stark and steep recession.”

However, Fink dismissed comparisons to the 2007-08 financial crisis, insisting that financial institutions today are more secure and that current issues affect only a small fraction of the overall market.


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