The UAE has launched an Agentic AI and robotics initiative with the explicit goal of lifting productivity in the labour market. Unlike many AI announcements, this one is framed around output per worker rather than around models or data centers.
What is being proposed
The project blends two things. Agentic AI — software that takes actions, not just answers — for white-collar tasks like reporting, scheduling, customer service, and admin work. And robotics — physical systems for warehouses, logistics, light manufacturing, and aspects of healthcare. Together, they are pitched as a way to do more with the same headcount, especially in sectors that struggle to hire.
Why productivity is the right framing
Most AI conversations focus on cost cutting, which is a difficult message politically and operationally. Productivity is a healthier frame. If a worker can deliver more value per hour with AI assistance, wages can rise without inflating the cost base. That is the upside scenario.
The risks worth being honest about
Three things will determine whether this story plays out well. First, the rollout has to come with serious worker training, not just tool deployment. Second, there has to be a clear plan for roles that genuinely become redundant — reskilling pathways, not vague promises. Third, productivity gains have to be shared with workers, not absorbed entirely as employer margin.
What businesses can do now
Three practical moves. Map your most repetitive workflows and pick one for an Agentic AI pilot. Build a small internal tiger team that owns AI tools, not just IT. And measure outcomes in time saved and quality improved, not just cost.
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