The inquiry aims to understand both the opportunities and risks of AI across UK businesses, as well as whether existing workplace protections remain fit for purpose.
This marks a notable evolution in the UK’s approach. Until recently, policy has largely favoured a “pro-innovation” stance, allowing organisations to adopt AI with relatively light regulation. However, the pace of technological change, particularly with generative AI and advanced automation has outstripped expectations.
AI is now influencing decisions across the entire employee lifecycle, from CV screening and recruitment to performance management and workforce planning. As a result, government and regulators are beginning to ask a more fundamental question: are current safeguards enough in a world where AI is becoming essential infrastructure?
At the heart of the inquiry is a growing recognition that workplace AI is not risk-free. While the technology offers clear efficiency gains, it also introduces complex challenges that many organisations are only beginning to understand.
One of the primary concerns is bias and discrimination. AI systems are trained on historical data, which can embed and replicate existing inequalities if not properly managed.
There are also significant questions around transparency and explainability. In many cases, employees may not fully understand how decisions affecting them, such as hiring or promotion outcomes, have been made, making it difficult to challenge or appeal those decisions.
Data protection and privacy are also under increasing scrutiny. The use of AI in monitoring productivity or analysing employee behaviour raises concerns about surveillance and the boundaries of acceptable workplace oversight.
Perhaps most notably, there is rising attention on accountability. When an AI system contributes to a flawed or unfair decision, responsibility can become unclear, whether it sits with the employer, the developer, or the system itself.
Beyond immediate risks, the inquiry reflects broader uncertainty about how AI will reshape work itself.
AI is expected to drive productivity, create new roles, and transform industries, but it is also likely to displace certain jobs, particularly at entry and graduate levels.
This dual impact is central to the government’s investigation. Policymakers are examining how businesses can balance innovation with workforce protection, including the need for reskilling and long-term workforce planning.
The question is no longer whether AI will change the workplace, but how organisations and policymakers can manage that transition responsibly.
The inquiry does not exist in isolation. It sits alongside growing activity from UK regulators, including the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which is already reviewing how automated decision-making is used in areas such as recruitment.
There is also increasing alignment with international frameworks, as the UK engages with broader efforts to establish governance principles for AI.
Together, these developments point towards a future where organisations face greater expectations around transparency, fairness and human oversight even if formal legislation is still evolving.
For employers, AI adoption can no longer be treated as purely a technical or operational decision as it is becoming a matter of governance, risk management and workplace culture.
Organisations are being encouraged to:
The Business and Trade Committee’s findings are expected to shape future government policy, potentially influencing new guidance, regulatory frameworks, and workplace standards.
While the exact outcomes remain to be seen, one thing is certain: scrutiny of AI in the workplace is intensifying.
For organisations across facilities management, workplace strategy and the wider built environment, this presents both a challenge and an opportunity. Those that take a proactive approach, building transparency, trust and robust governance into their AI strategies, will be best placed to navigate what comes next.
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