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It Wasn't Smart AI That Took the Jobs. It Was a Clumsy Robot That Keeps Calling in Sick.

On June 20, 2026, a single chart posted by Figure AI CEO Brett Adcock showing 750 robots outnumbering an estimated 180 to 250 human employees for the first time was widely consumed as a symbolic turning point for the humanoid robotics industry. Yet half of that crossover stems not from an explosion in robot deployment but from four years of nearly flat human hiring, a purely arithmetic fact that reframes the entire narrative once it is stated plainly. Concurrent shop-floor reporting from Chinese factories describes humanoid robots operating at only 20 to 30 percent of human efficiency and suffering mass equipment "sick leave" after failing to adapt to factory environments, even as more than 30 billion yuan poured into this low-efficiency hardware category in the first quarter of 2026 alone. This contradiction indicates that the true trigger for labor substitution is not robotic competence but a cost structure built on round-the-clock operation, the absence of paid leave, and freedom from wage inflation, a pattern that carries far heavier implications when paired with Goldman Sachs data showing roughly 11,000 net U.S. job losses per month and a 3.3-percentage-point widening of the entry-level-to-experienced wage gap. Ultimately, the central issue is not the moment robots become as capable as humans, but the structural diagnosis that generative AI is already erasing the first rung of the white-collar ladder while physical AI simultaneously erases the first rung of the factory ladder, a two-bladed cut that has already begun on both ends of the labor market at once.

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