AI and the Translators Left Behind: When Good Enough Wins

In January 2026, Kristalina Georgieva, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, stood before an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos and offered a statistic that landed with the quiet brutality of a footnote in a corporate restructuring memo. The number of translators and interpreters at the IMF, she said, had dropped from 200 to 50. The cause was not a budget crisis or a policy realignment. It was technology. The fund had simply decided that machines could handle most of the work that humans used to do.
Georgieva presented the figure as evidence of a broader transformation. Forty per cent of global jobs, she argued, would be transformed or eliminated by artificial intelligence, with that figure climbing to 60 per cent in advanced economies. But it was the specificity of the translation example that stuck. This was not a hypothetical projection or an economist's forecast. It was a headcount. Real people, with real expertise in the precise rendering of financial policy across languages and cultures, had been replaced by systems that could approximate their output at a fraction of the cost.
The IMF is not alone. Across the global translation industry, now valued at an estimated 31.70 billion US dollars according to Slator's 2025 Language Industry Market Report, a similar pattern is playing out. Large language models and neural machine translation systems have not simply made human translators obsolete. They have restructured the profession from the inside, converting skilled practitioners into quality controllers for text they did not write. The question this raises is not whether AI can translate. It demonstrably can, often to a standard that passes casual inspection. The question is what happens to a profession, and to the cultural knowledge it carries, when the market decides that “good enough” is good enough.
The Numbers Behind the Quiet Collapse
A 2024 survey conducted by the United Kingdom's Society of Authors, which polled 787 of its 12,500 members, found that 36 per cent of translators had already lost work to generative AI. Forty-three per cent reported a decrease in income as a direct result of the technology. Over three-quarters, some 77 per cent, believed that generative AI would negatively affect their future earnings. Eighty-six per cent expressed concern that the use of generative AI devalues human-made creative work. These are not projections. They are reports from working professionals describing what has already happened to their livelihoods.
The income data from individual translators is more granular and more alarming. Brian Merchant, writing in his newsletter Blood in the Machine, documented cases across the profession in mid-2025. One technical translator with 15 years of experience reported earning just 8,000 euros in 2025, down from six figures in previous years. A French-English translator based in Quebec described a 60 per cent income decline in 2024, with projections suggesting an 80 per cent drop from peak earnings by the end of 2025. An Italian-English translator in Rome reported that work requests had ceased entirely for the month of June 2025, after years of working 50 to 60 hours per week. An English-Portuguese translator documented that post-editing rates had collapsed from 0.04 euros to 0.02 euros per source word, halving the already modest compensation for correcting machine output.
In the United States, Andy Benzo, president of the American Translators Association, told CNN in January 2026 that many translators were leaving the profession entirely. Benzo noted that the risks of using AI translation in “high-stakes” fields remain “humongous,” yet the exodus continues regardless. Ian Giles, chair of the Translators Association at the UK's Society of Authors, confirmed the same pattern, noting that translators were seeking retraining “because translation isn't generating the income it previously did.” The exits are not dramatic. There are no picket lines or public protests. People are simply disappearing from a profession that can no longer sustain them.
The scale of this workforce is not trivial. There are approximately 640,000 professional translators globally, and three out of four are freelancers. It is this freelance majority that has borne the brunt of the disruption, lacking the institutional protections and guaranteed workloads that might have cushioned the blow.
A study published in 2025 by Carl Benedikt Frey and Pedro Llanos-Paredes at the Oxford Martin School quantified the scale of displacement with unusual precision. Analysing variation in Google Translate adoption across 695 local labour markets in the United States, the researchers found that a one percentage point increase in the use of Google Translate corresponded to a 0.71 percentage point reduction in translator employment growth. The cumulative effect, they estimated, amounted to more than 28,000 fewer translator positions created over the period from 2010 to 2023. And that figure captures only the impact of a single, relatively crude machine translation tool that preceded the large language model era. The arrival of systems like GPT-4, Claude, and Gemini has accelerated the process enormously, because these models do not just translate. They handle idiomatic expression, register, and contextual nuance at a level that earlier statistical systems could not approach.
In July 2025, Microsoft researchers published a study examining which occupations were most exposed to generative AI capabilities. Translators and interpreters ranked first on the list, with 98 per cent of their work activities overlapping with tasks that AI systems could perform with relatively high completion rates. The study analysed 200,000 real-world conversations between users and Microsoft's Copilot system to arrive at its rankings. The researchers were careful to note that high exposure does not automatically mean elimination. But the practical effect has been unmistakable. Employers have used the availability of AI translation as justification for cutting rates, reducing headcounts, and restructuring workflows around machine output.
From Translator to Post-Editor
The restructuring of translation work follows a pattern that is becoming familiar across AI-affected professions. The human does not vanish. Instead, they are repositioned downstream in the production process, tasked with reviewing and correcting output that a machine generated in seconds. In the translation industry, this workflow is known as Machine Translation Post-Editing, or MTPE, and it has rapidly become the dominant model for commercial translation work.
According to Slator's 2025 survey of the language industry, 60 per cent of all respondents were using machine translation, with adoption reaching 80 per cent among language service providers. Among those using machine translation or large language models, between 90 and 98 per cent performed some level of post-editing on AI-generated content. Eighty-four per cent of language service integrators reported that clients had specifically requested human editing services to review AI-generated translations. The human, in other words, has not been removed from the process. But the nature of their involvement has been fundamentally altered. They are no longer creating. They are correcting.
The compensation reflects this downgrade. Post-editing rates typically fall between 50 and 70 per cent of standard translation rates, with some agencies offering as little as 25 per cent of what a full human translation would command. Industry data from 2025 indicates that MTPE work commands between 0.05 and 0.15 US dollars per word, compared with 0.15 to 0.30 dollars per word for standard human translation. One translator documented by Equal Times, an international labour news platform, described pre-translated segments paying just 30 to 50 per cent of original rates, while fully automated platforms paid up to seven times less than standard. The economic logic is straightforward. If the machine does 80 per cent of the work, the reasoning goes, then the human should be paid for only 20 per cent. What this calculation ignores is that post-editing often requires comparable time and cognitive effort to translation from scratch, because the translator must not only identify errors but also understand the systematic patterns of how the AI fails and where its confidence is misplaced.
The workflow itself has been transformed in ways that strip autonomy from the translator. Texts no longer arrive as clean source documents to be rendered thoughtfully into a target language. They arrive pre-segmented, with machine-generated suggestions already populating each segment. The translator's task becomes one of triage: deciding which suggestions are acceptable, which need modification, and which must be discarded entirely. Automated platforms distribute this work via alerts that give translators minutes or even seconds to claim individual segments, creating a piecework dynamic more reminiscent of a fulfilment warehouse than a skilled profession. Some platforms threaten automatic disconnection for translators who dispute corrections imposed by quality-assurance algorithms.
Jean-Jacques, a 30-year veteran translator quoted by Equal Times, described the shift bluntly. “It's not really a matter of translating anymore,” he said, “but revising and correcting the segments proposed by the machine.” Another translator, identified as Alina, captured the paradox at the heart of the arrangement. “AI is both a tool and a threat,” she said. “We ourselves are teaching it how to translate, how to improve.” Each correction a post-editor makes feeds back into the training data that will make the next generation of AI translation marginally better, and the human's role marginally less essential.
This dynamic, in which skilled workers are conscripted into training their own replacements, is not unique to translation. It has appeared in content moderation, coding, and legal document review. But in translation, the irony is particularly sharp, because the expertise being extracted is precisely the kind that AI systems struggle most to develop on their own: cultural sensitivity, tonal awareness, and the ability to navigate the space between what a text says and what it means.
What Machines Cannot Feel
The case for human translation has always rested on something more than accuracy. It rests on the claim that translation is an interpretive act, a creative negotiation between two linguistic and cultural systems that requires not just knowledge but judgement. Jhumpa Lahiri, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who has written extensively about translation, describes the process as “a radical act of reshaping text and self.” In her essay collection Translating Myself and Others, published by Princeton University Press in 2022, Lahiri argues that “a translator restores the meaning of a text by means of an elaborate, alchemical process that requires imagination, ingenuity, and freedom.”
This is not the language of quality assurance. It is the language of craft, of a practice that involves the translator's full intellectual and emotional engagement with a text. Emily Wilson, the first woman to translate Homer's Odyssey into English, has spoken repeatedly about the impossibility of separating linguistic from cultural knowledge in translation. The hardest part of translation, she has argued, is not understanding the original but “figuring out how to create it entirely from scratch in a totally different language and culture.” Wilson's translation of the Odyssey was widely praised precisely because it made choices that no algorithm would make: tonal decisions, rhythmic choices, and interpretive framings that reflected not just the Greek text but Wilson's own understanding of what the poem means to contemporary English-speaking readers.
Gregory Rabassa's English translation of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude is perhaps the most celebrated example of translation as creative achievement. Marquez himself reportedly said that he considered the English translation a work of art in its own right, a remarkable statement from an author about a rendering of his own novel. Edith Grossman, the acclaimed translator of both Marquez and Cervantes, described Rabassa as “the godfather of us all,” crediting him with introducing Latin American literature to the English-speaking world in a way that preserved not just meaning but spirit.
These examples belong to the domain of literary translation, which remains relatively insulated from AI disruption. Literary commissions have continued to flow to human translators, in part because publishers recognise that the qualities that make a literary translation valuable are precisely the qualities that machines lack. But the insulation is narrower than it appears. The vast majority of professional translation work is not literary. It is commercial, legal, technical, medical, and administrative. And it is in these domains that the restructuring has been most severe, not because the cultural stakes are lower, but because the market has decided they are.
Consider the translation of a medical consent form from English into Tagalog for a Filipino patient in a London hospital. The document is not literary. It will never win a prize. But the accuracy of its translation has direct consequences for a person's understanding of what is being done to their body. A machine translation might render the words correctly while missing the pragmatic force of the language: the way a particular phrasing might sound reassuring or threatening, the cultural assumptions embedded in notions of consent, the difference between informing someone and making them feel informed. These are not edge cases. They are the bread and butter of professional translation, and they are the first tasks being handed to machines.
Or consider immigration proceedings, where a mistranslation can determine whether an asylum seeker's testimony is deemed credible. The translator in that context is not merely converting words. They are mediating between legal systems, cultural frameworks of narrative and evidence, and the emotional register of a person recounting traumatic experiences. The difference between “I was afraid” and “I feared for my life” is not a matter of synonymy. It is a matter of legal consequence, and navigating it requires the kind of situated cultural judgement that no statistical model possesses.
The Hybrid Illusion
The industry's preferred narrative for this transition is “human-AI collaboration.” The framing suggests a partnership: the machine handles the heavy lifting, and the human provides the finishing touch. But the power dynamics of this arrangement are radically asymmetric. The machine sets the terms. The human adjusts.
This is not collaboration in any meaningful sense. It is supervision, and it is supervision of a peculiarly degrading kind, because the supervisor is being paid less than they would earn if they were simply doing the work themselves. The translator who once sat with a source text and crafted a target text from scratch, making hundreds of micro-decisions about register, idiom, rhythm, and cultural resonance, now sits with a machine-generated draft and decides, sentence by sentence, whether it is wrong enough to fix.
The cognitive experience of post-editing is qualitatively different from translation. Several translators have described it as more fatiguing and less satisfying than original translation work. The machine's output creates a kind of gravitational pull. Even when the translator knows a better rendering exists, the effort required to override the machine's suggestion and compose something from scratch can feel disproportionate to the compensation. Over time, this produces a phenomenon that linguists and labour researchers have begun to call “anchoring,” in which the translator's own instincts are gradually subordinated to the machine's defaults. The result is not a blend of human and machine intelligence. It is machine intelligence with a human stamp of approval.
A 2025 survey of translators found that a majority, some 66 per cent, acknowledged that MTPE can be useful but still requires substantial human intervention. Roughly half of respondents refused to offer discounts for post-editing work, arguing that the effort required is routinely underestimated by clients and agencies. Among those who did discount, the most common reduction fell between 10 and 30 per cent, far less than the 50 to 75 per cent cuts that many agencies impose unilaterally.
Rosa, a translator quoted by Equal Times, described the economic logic with characteristic directness. “Profit is the only thing that matters,” she said, “and translation has become like a commodity that they extract from us at the lowest possible price.” The commodity metaphor is precise. What was once a craft, defined by the individual translator's knowledge, taste, and cultural fluency, has been reframed as a raw material to be processed at industrial scale.
The Structural Incapacity Argument
There is a version of this story in which what is happening to translators is tragic but temporary, a painful adjustment period that will eventually stabilise as the technology matures and the market finds a new equilibrium. In this version, AI translation will continue to improve until the quality gap between machine and human output narrows to insignificance, at which point the remaining human translators will occupy a small, highly specialised niche: literary translation, diplomatic interpreting, and other domains where the stakes are too high for automation.
But this narrative assumes that the qualities human translators bring are merely a matter of degree, that machines are doing a slightly worse version of the same thing, and that incremental improvement will close the gap. There is a competing argument, advanced by translators, linguists, and cognitive scientists, that the gap is not quantitative but structural. That what human translators do when they translate with cultural sensitivity and emotional intelligence is not a more refined version of pattern matching. It is a fundamentally different cognitive operation.
A study published in Nature's Humanities and Social Sciences Communications in 2026, examining AI performance in literary autobiography translation, found that while AI models could produce grammatically correct and largely accurate translations, they consistently failed to capture the emotional texture and cultural specificity of the original texts. The researchers concluded that human translators brought interpretive capacities that were not simply absent from AI systems but categorically different in kind. AI models could identify the surface layer of meaning but failed to recognise cultural allusions and deeper emotional context, elements that are essential not just to literature but to any communication that carries weight beyond its literal content.
This distinction matters because it determines whether human translators are a temporary patch or a permanent necessity. If translation is ultimately a pattern-matching problem, then machines will eventually solve it. If it is an interpretive problem, requiring the kind of embodied cultural knowledge that comes from living inside a language and its associated worldview, then machines will not solve it, regardless of how much training data they consume. The patterns they learn are drawn from existing translations, which means they can only reproduce what human translators have already created. They cannot originate the kind of interpretive leap that makes a translation feel alive.
Poetry, with its reliance on rhythm, rhyme, and figurative language, remains a particularly formidable challenge. A machine can translate the denotative content of a poem. It cannot translate its music. It cannot decide, as Emily Wilson did with the Odyssey, that the opening word of an epic should be “Tell me” rather than “Sing to me,” and understand the cascade of interpretive consequences that follows from that single choice.
The Market Does Not Care About Craft
The structural incapacity argument, however compelling, runs into a problem that is not technological but economic. The market for translation services is not optimised for craft. It is optimised for throughput, cost reduction, and acceptable quality at scale. And by this measure, AI translation is already good enough for the vast majority of commercial applications. The Slator survey found that while 72 per cent of respondents cited accuracy concerns with machine translation and 68 per cent cited quality concerns, adoption continued to accelerate regardless. Trust grew slowly, but adoption grew fast. The concerns are real. They are also, from a procurement perspective, manageable.
This is the uncomfortable truth at the centre of the translation crisis. The question is not whether AI can match human translators in quality. It demonstrably cannot, particularly in contexts requiring cultural nuance, tonal sensitivity, or interpretive judgement. The question is whether the market values those qualities enough to pay for them. And the evidence, from rate compression to headcount reduction to the restructuring of workflows around machine output, suggests that it does not.
The AI-enabled translation services market, valued at 5.18 billion US dollars in 2025 according to Precedence Research, is projected to reach 50.69 billion by 2035, expanding at a compound annual growth rate of 25.62 per cent. These are not numbers that suggest a market hedging its bets. They describe an industry that has made a decisive bet on automation, with human involvement reduced to the minimum necessary to maintain an acceptable error rate. Software platforms already dominate the market, holding nearly 73 per cent of 2025 revenue, and they are growing faster than any other component as enterprises embed AI-driven localisation into core workflows.
The parallel to other creative and knowledge-work professions is instructive. Journalism, graphic design, customer service, and legal research have all experienced similar dynamics: AI systems that produce output of variable but often adequate quality, followed by a restructuring of human roles around review, correction, and oversight rather than creation. In each case, the same rhetorical move occurs. The technology is presented as a tool that augments human capability. In practice, it becomes a ceiling that constrains it. The human is not empowered. The human is made cheaper.
What Gets Lost When Languages Lose Their Interpreters
The consequences of this restructuring extend beyond the economic fortunes of individual translators. Languages are not neutral containers for information. They are living systems of meaning, shaped by history, geography, power, and culture. A translator who has spent decades working between English and Arabic, or Mandarin and Portuguese, or Hindi and German, carries within them a form of knowledge that is not reducible to a bilingual dictionary or a statistical model trained on parallel corpora.
The Frey and Llanos-Paredes study at Oxford Martin documented an additional finding that received less attention than the employment data but may be more consequential in the long term. Areas with robust Google Translate usage saw job postings demanding Spanish fluency grow by about 1.4 percentage points less than in other regions, with similar declines of roughly 1.3 and 0.8 percentage points for Chinese and German respectively, and measurable dampening even for Japanese and French. The adoption of machine translation, in other words, is not just replacing translators. It is reducing the perceived value of knowing another language at all.
This is a feedback loop with serious cultural implications. As machine translation becomes more capable and more widely adopted, the incentive to invest in human language skills diminishes. Fewer people pursue translation as a career. Fewer organisations invest in in-house linguistic expertise. The pool of human knowledge about how languages relate to one another, how cultural contexts shape meaning, and how texts function differently across linguistic boundaries gradually shrinks. And the AI systems that replace this knowledge are trained on the output of the very translators they displace, creating a closed loop in which the training data grows stale as the human source of fresh interpretive insight dries up.
Ian Giles, in his capacity as chair of the Translators Association, has raised precisely this concern, questioning whether “the demand for subtlety and craft from enough readers and publishers” will “save highly skilled individuals from becoming mere AI post-editors.” The word “mere” carries the weight of the entire argument. It acknowledges that the role of post-editor exists. It questions whether the role is sufficient to sustain the expertise it depends upon.
The problem is compounded by the pipeline effect. If experienced translators leave the profession and aspiring translators are deterred by collapsing incomes, the next generation of human translators simply will not exist in sufficient numbers. The craft knowledge that takes years to develop, the intuitive feel for how a sentence should land in a target language, the awareness of cultural registers that no textbook teaches, is not the kind of knowledge that can be stored in a database and retrieved on demand. It lives in people. When those people leave, it leaves with them.
The Canary and the Coal Mine
Professional translators have long occupied a peculiar position in the knowledge economy. Their work is invisible when done well. A reader who encounters a beautifully translated novel does not think about the translator. A patient who reads a clearly rendered medical document in their own language does not consider the person who bridged the linguistic gap. This invisibility made translators vulnerable long before AI arrived. It meant that their expertise could be devalued without anyone noticing, because the beneficiaries of their work rarely understood what it involved.
What is happening to translators now is therefore not just a story about one profession. It is a preview of what happens when AI is deployed not to eliminate human workers but to restructure their role in ways that extract their expertise while diminishing their authority, autonomy, and compensation. The translator who becomes a post-editor is still needed. But the nature of the need has changed. They are needed not for what they can create but for what they can catch. Not for their vision but for their vigilance.
Georgieva's statistic from Davos, those 150 translators who lost their positions at the IMF, represents one institution's calculation that the cultural and interpretive knowledge those individuals carried was worth less than the cost savings achieved by replacing them with technology. That calculation is now being replicated across every sector that relies on translation, from international law to pharmaceutical regulation to immigration services. In each case, the logic is the same. The machine produces output that is adequate for most purposes. The remaining humans clean up whatever the machine gets wrong. And the expertise that once defined the profession gradually atrophies, because there is no economic incentive to develop it and no structural pathway through which it can be transmitted to the next generation.
The question, then, is not whether AI translation will continue to improve. It will. And it is not whether human translators will survive in some form. They will, at least for a while, as post-editors and quality reviewers and specialists in the narrow domains where machine output remains unreliable. The question is whether a society that systematically devalues the ability to translate with feeling, with cultural awareness, with the full depth of human interpretive intelligence, will eventually discover that it has lost something it cannot rebuild. Not because the technology failed, but because the market decided that what translators knew was not worth preserving.
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Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk








