The trend of “AI-washing” layoffs to appeal to investors may indicate that the investment community supports AI-driven transformation and cost cutting no matter the downstream impacts on the workforce and society. Just Capital’s latest polling tells a different story.

We’ve now tracked investor, public, and corporate leader sentiment on responsible AI deployment for three consecutive quarters. The investor data this summer stands out. After surging to 94% in Spring 2026, investor confidence that AI will be a net positive for society has pulled back to 76% — a significant 18-point drop in a single quarter.

What’s driving the change? Maybe it’s the gap between hope and reality. Investors who were riding the wave of strong AI-linked market performance and early productivity signals are now confronting the messier realities: safety concerns, workforce disruption, uncertain ROI, and possible societal backlash. And they’re getting more pessimistic.

Investors Express AI-Related Concerns

The specific concerns are telling. 78% percent of investors now believe AI will negatively impact social division and inequality — up from 68% just six months ago. Concern about environmental impact has climbed sharply too, with 57% of investors expecting negative environmental consequences, compared to 49% previously. And like every other audience in our survey, investors rank safety and security as their top concerns, above U.S. competitiveness, productivity, and returns.

Most striking is where investors stand on corporate responsibility. 43% expect companies to dedicate more than 5% of their AI investment to supporting displaced workers. Currently, only 17% of corporate leaders signal they’re preparing to do that. This is not a peripheral issue for the investment community, it is a material one. Investors see companies racing to capture AI’s disruptive gains while underinvesting in societal stewardship and resilience as a risk that threatens to destabilize the very foundations on which healthy markets are built.

The Leadership Playbook

That said, the investor story isn’t that AI is losing its luster. Ninety-six percent still believe AI will positively impact innovation, and optimism on economic growth and returns remains high. But investors are growing more sophisticated in what’s required to maintain that optimism. They want to see companies deploy AI with a credible plan for managing the downside. And they expect boards to have strong AI-related governance and risk management practices in place.

Corporate leaders and boards who assume they will have unconditional support from investors for aggressive AI deployment may want to think again. Good governance may be the key to keeping them onside.

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