Artificial intelligence will widen wealth gaps and global conflict will deepen economic turmoil, Robert Kiyosaki warned, arguing that entrepreneurs who embrace AI will prosper while workers risk replacement amid rising geopolitical tensions.
Rich Dad Poor Dad author and investor Robert Kiyosaki shared posts on social media platform X, addressing artificial intelligence (AI), job displacement, and escalating geopolitical tensions. He linked technological disruption and global conflict to broader economic and societal risks, sharing his personal views rather than referencing specific industry-wide studies.
“AI makes the rich richer,” Kiyosaki wrote on Feb. 27, arguing that artificial intelligence strengthens business owners who control capital and technology. Referring to tech entrepreneur Jack Dorsey, co-founder of Twitter and chief executive officer of Block, he noted that Dorsey reduced his workforce despite strong productivity, attributing the move to AI-driven efficiencies rather than financial distress. Kiyosaki contended that automation enables companies to streamline operations, cut labor costs, and sustain output with fewer employees as machine learning systems assume routine and analytical tasks. He emphasized:
“Rich Dad lesson: Think like an employee and AI will replace you. Think like an entrepreneur and hire AI to make you richer… like Jack Dorsey.”
The statement aligns with his long-held focus on ownership, leverage, and strategic technology adoption to build wealth as part of his broader financial philosophy, not as industry-wide data analysis.
Dorsey announced the layoffs at Block on Feb. 26, cutting more than 4,000 roles and reducing headcount from over 10,000 to under 6,000, one of the largest tech workforce reductions this year. He credited advances in artificial intelligence, explaining that “intelligence tools” have changed how companies operate, allowing smaller teams to deliver stronger results. Dorsey stressed that Block remains financially healthy, reporting fourth-quarter gross profit growth of 24% to $2.87 billion, and described the move as a single decisive action rather than repeated smaller cuts that could weaken morale.
On Feb. 28, Kiyosaki pivoted to global conflict, writing, “War!!! What is it good for?” while arriving in Hanoi as tensions involving Iran intensified. Recalling losses from his Marine service during the Vietnam War, he questioned prolonged conflicts, cited the Ukraine and Russia war, and urged followers to pray for peace, linking automation and instability to long-term economic risk based on his personal macroeconomic concerns rather than formal geopolitical risk assessments.
He argues that entrepreneurs who use AI to replace labor can expand profits while employees face displacement.
AI adoption may boost margins for companies while increasing economic inequality and labor market volatility, depending on broader economic conditions and company-specific execution.
He pointed to escalating tensions and ongoing wars as threats to global stability and economic confidence.
He urges individuals to think like entrepreneurs and leverage technology rather than rely solely on traditional employment as part of his long-standing investment philosophy.