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Opinions expressed by contributors are their own.
- AI efficiency gains will unlock high valueadd roles for developers.
- Rotem Farkash explains AI will “actually lead to more creativity”.
- McKinsey report shows AI can enhance talent retention.
- Hiring into tech roles remains resilient despite headlines.
The emergence of AIpowered coding assistants such as GitHub Copilot and Gemini Code Assist has led many developers and industry observers to ask a pressing question: will AI replace software developers? While the concern is understandable, the reality is far more nuanced. Rather than replacing developers, AI is more likely to reshape how they work, and what they focus on.
AIpowered efficiency gains to unleash developer creativity
AI tools have become effective at handling repetitive and structured programming tasks. They suggest improvements and detect bugs amongst a myriad of capabilities that significantly reduce the amount of time developers spend on routine work. In fact, a 2023 research paper by Microsoft Research, GitHub Inc., and MIT Sloan School of Management ran a trial and concluded the group with access to GitHub Copilot, an AI pair programmer, completed the task 55.8% faster than the control group. The same study found programmers who used AI could code 126% more projects per week, and AI has only developed since. Prior to this. AI acts as a productivity assistant, accelerating workflows and helping programmers focus on highervalue tasks.
Employers have accelerated plans for efficiency with job vacancies requiring ‘AI Agent’ skills skyrocketing by 1,587% throughout 2025, according to Randstad’s Workmonitor January 2026 report. The report concluded a Great Workforce Adaption is underway, as AI drives greater efficiency in tasks rather than replacing entire jobs. Instead, developers’ roles are being transformed. By being allowed to focus on high valueadd tasks where the onus is placed on creativity and problemsolving skills, AI is reshaping objectives maximising developer output.
Rotem Farkash: AI productivity gains herald a new type of programmer
According to Rotem Farkash, who founded an AI startup after a long career in cybersecurity, ‘AIdriven tools are first and foremost going to be used to automate routine tasks, whether it’s documenting code functionality or refactoring code. This will actually lead to more creativity, as developers can focus on more complex and creative aspects of software development’.
Evidence found in the previous studies reinforces Rotem Farkash’s position on AI. According to KPMG, an accounting and consulting firm, developers using GitHub Copilot are saving 4.5 hours a week on average and report that the quality of their code has improved, based on a survey by the firm. This also aligns with Farkash’s own forecast, who explained that ‘natural language interfaces, customised content creation, automated workflows, and enhanced unstructured data ingestion are just some of the ways that AI can be leveraged to enhance efficiency in software development’.
Just as Rotem Farkash described, this transformation is boosting developer satisfaction and engagement, since developers now have more time to concentrate on the most enjoyable aspects of coding: creativity, problem solving, and responding to unique challenges.
McKinsey: from productivity gains to enhancing talent retention
A McKinsey study showcased additional benefits beyond these productivity improvements. Per the study, ‘equipping developers to be their most productive also significantly improves the developer experience, which in turn can help companies retain and excite their best talent’. This was reinforced by findings that demonstrated developers ‘were more than twice as likely to report overall happiness, fulfilment, and a state of flow’ attributing this to the AIbased tools’ ability to automate routine work. This also aligns with the previously mentioned study conducted by Microsoft and the Institute for Work Life, which found 84% of participants reported positive changes in their daily work practices.
The McKinsey report discovered that developers using generative AI tools could write new code in nearly half the time. This aligns with the finding that generative AI automates repetitive or ‘grunt’ work, such as boilerplate code generation, documentation, and routine debugging, ensuring software engineers can focus on more meaningful and intellectually stimulating tasks, such as designing system architecture or solving complex problems.
Beyond the news headlines: developer hiring shows resilient growth
While layoffs dominate the headlines, many of those very same companies have been rehiring in recent years. Remember when Google laid off 12,000 employees and Meta laid off 10,000 employees in 2023? In reality, Meta and Google has been rehiring thousands of people over the past few years, with Google being close to their alltime high headcount. While layoffs are widely reported, rehiring does not receive the same coverage creating this impression that the quantity of jobs is only ever reducing.
The tech industry is not collapsing. There are now more people making a living in tech than in 2019, another market peak, and the evidence shows that AI is not replacing software engineers. While AI can produce code by recognising and applying learned patterns, it does not genuinely grasp the wider context of a product, the underlying business requirements or the overall user experience. There is still a clear need for developers to define the problem, and ensure the software behaves accordingly to realworld situations.
AI represents the next step in this technological evolution. Ultimately, the question is not whether AI will replace software developers, but how developers will evolve with AI. Those who adapt and embrace these tools will find themselves empowered rather than displaced. AI may change how software is written, but human creativity and problemsolving will remain at the heart of programming.
