Speaking on entrepreneur Nikhil Kamath's podcast, Amodei said human-centric skills and AI-focused industries will become increasingly valuable as the technology continues to evolve.

'Coding Is Going Away First'

Amodei said coding is likely to be the first major casualty of rapid AI advancement.

"I think coding is going away first," he said.

He added that while software engineering as a whole would take longer to automate, AI would eventually be capable of handling the entire process.

"The broader task of software engineering will take longer. But I think doing that end-to-end is going to happen as well."

Human Skills Will Still Matter

Despite AI's growing capabilities, Amodei believes several aspects of software development will continue to require human expertise.

He said areas such as product design, understanding user needs, identifying market demand, and managing teams of AI systems are likely to remain dependent on human judgment and creativity.

AI Could Boost Productivity

Amodei argued that AI's takeover of routine tasks should be viewed as a productivity enhancer rather than a complete replacement for human workers.

He suggested that even if AI performs 95 percent of a job, the remaining human contribution could become significantly more impactful.

"If you're only doing 5% of the task, the AI does the other 95%, you become 20 times more productive," he said.

Advice for Young Professionals

Offering career advice to young people, Amodei urged them to build skills that complement AI instead of competing with it.

He said careers that leverage uniquely human abilities alongside AI are likely to offer the greatest opportunities in the years ahead.

Growing Debate Over AI Replacing Jobs

Amodei's comments come amid an intensifying global debate over the impact of generative AI on employment, particularly in the technology sector.

The rapid rise of AI models capable of writing code, analysing data, generating content and assisting with complex decision-making has prompted companies to integrate AI into everyday workflows. Tech giants and startups alike are increasingly using AI-powered coding assistants to speed up software development and reduce repetitive programming tasks.

This has fuelled concerns among software developers and other knowledge workers about job displacement. At the same time, many industry leaders argue that AI will augment rather than entirely replace human workers by automating routine tasks and allowing professionals to focus on higher-value work.

Amodei's remarks align with a growing consensus among AI executives that future careers will increasingly require workers to collaborate with AI systems instead of competing against them.