Elon Musk has predicted that within the next two decades, people will no longer need to work to survive, as artificial intelligence and robotics will make work an optional activity rather than an economic necessity. Speaking on Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath’s “People by WTF” podcast, Musk said that in “less than 20 years, maybe even 10–15 years,” technological advances will push humanity into a future where most goods and services can be produced without human labour. In such a world, he said, work would be more like a hobby, comparable to choosing to grow vegetables in a garden even though one can simply buy them at the store.
Musk, who heads Tesla, SpaceX, X and xAI, stressed that people would still be free to work if they wanted to, but it would no longer be compulsory for economic survival. “If you can think of it, you can have it” is how he described the level of abundance he believes advanced AI and humanoid robots could eventually unlock. He cautioned that his comments could be replayed in 20 years to test his prediction but reiterated that the pace of progress makes such a scenario plausible within that timeframe.
AI, Robotics And The Idea Of “Universal High Income”:
Musk’s prediction relies on the idea that robots and AI systems will do the majority of productive work, significantly increasing productivity while relieving people of repetitive labor. He made the case at the US-Saudi Investment Forum earlier in November that humanoid robots and artificial intelligence (AI) will “eliminate poverty” and essentially make everyone affluent by creating everything they require at almost zero marginal cost. In that context, he broached the idea of a “universal high income”, a financial safety net that would assist people in a world where traditional employment is optional.
In contrast to the widely debated “universal basic income,” Musk did not specify how such a universal high income would be financed or allocated; instead, he connected it to an economy in which the majority of value creation is handled by machines. He suggested that if AI and robotics become capable enough to cover all human demands, money’s role as a database for distributing labor and resources will decline significantly. Over the long term, he claimed, money itself could “disappear as a concept” because scarcity would no longer characterize economic existence.
When AI “Runs Out Of Things To Do” For Humans:
Musk also raised a less-discussed consequence of such abundance: a point where AI and robots “run out of things to do to make humans happy.” He said that after satisfying every reasonable human need and want, advanced systems could end up doing things primarily for themselves, as there would be limits to how much additional comfort or entertainment humans require. This, he suggested, could mark a shift from AI being a tool for human satisfaction to an ecosystem partly driven by machine objectives.
The billionaire acknowledged that his vision resembles science-fiction depictions of post-scarcity societies, citing works where superintelligent AI entities coexist with humans in worlds without traditional jobs or money. Yet, he maintained that given current trajectories in computing power and robotics, such scenarios are no longer purely speculative. He framed the coming decades as a test of whether humanity can manage this transition without deepening inequality or social unrest, even as technology makes unprecedented prosperity technically possible.




