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AI Becomes Everyday Infrastructure as Skills, Not Tech, Decide Who Wins

Value creation now hinges on workforce readiness rather than additional model deployments.

Overview

  • Google’s latest Ipsos-backed survey confirms mass adoption, with 62% of people using chatbots globally, Argentina at 66% overall use, Mexico near 65%, and learning cited by 74% worldwide and 75% in Argentina.
  • Argentina’s real-estate sector reports tangible gains: Camesi estimates a 30% cut in listing and sale times, valuations done up to 50% faster, and AI embedded in about 36% of firms, supported by new proptech like InmoCheck and Brick Data.
  • Industry research reframes the constraint as human, not technical: ManpowerGroup and Accenture find low alignment and role clarity despite rising investment, with only 18% of workers feeling the vision is clear and 20% understanding AI’s impact, while 43% say targeted training would build confidence.
  • LinkedIn data presented at the WEF point to roughly 1.3 million AI-related jobs created in two years plus 600,000 in data centers, even as hiring slowed for macroeconomic reasons, with early signs that Mexico is exporting specialized AI talent.
  • European experts argue AI is also a political and cultural project, urging regulation paired with domestic capability so the EU’s common rules translate into real technological capacity rather than dependence.