NAB CEO Andrew Irvine on How AI Will Transform Work and Power Australia’s Economy
NAB News
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- Date Published
- 14 Jan 2026
- Priority Score
- 3
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 14 Jan 2026, 03:00 am
Description
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMirAFBVV95cUxPdmhTSHlNamR2YXoyaTdEUjFaeHZPb3RZREwxVWlXTVh1VXJfUTFMZDJyTzUwLWtNN0Y1NG5MdFE0TlQxckl5cVktZzE4bklCbmlkdDI2ZFpvd09pUTRzbWJEM1c1ZzNSY19jMUswWm90MjRySldVYTUzTzR5dENITWt3N0YtM3VIc0pGNWdBVVcxYUNuZ3d0cXJNWjZ3cDNYWHNVODB4MWFORWJZ?oc=5" target="_blank">NAB CEO Andrew Irvine on how AI will transform work, and powering Australia’s economy</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">NAB</font>
Summary
In a detailed overview, NAB CEO Andrew Irvine emphasizes the transformative potential of artificial intelligence (AI) for Australia's economy, particularly in enhancing productivity and efficiency in banking. By integrating AI for tasks such as deploying virtual assistants, NAB is improving customer satisfaction and operational efficiency. While acknowledging the challenges and nonlinear progression similar to previous technological shifts like the internet, Irvine advocates for responsible AI implementation that complements human roles. This perspective contributes to discussions on how AI can drive economic growth while balancing safety and ethical considerations, with significant implications for Australian AI governance and policy frameworks.
Body
NAB CEO Andrew Irvine on how AI will transform work, and powering Australia’s economy
14.01.2026
NAB Group CEO Andrew Irvine has shared his reflections on the economy for the year ahead, saying Australians continue to have many reasons to feel optimistic.
“The economy has room to grow; but the challenge is that we don’t have any excess capacity. Productivity will be important so that the economy can grow faster,” he said.
In reflecting on the year ahead, Mr Irvine acknowledged that the tragic events in Sydney remained front of mind for many Australians, before turning to the opportunities and challenges shaping the nation’s future.
Mr Irvine said productivity reform was critical to sustaining growth and lifting living standards where reform could make meaningful changes; Artificial Intelligence (AI) and energy; as well as housing, and red tape and complexity.
Artificial Intelligence
Mr Irvine said artificial intelligence was one of the most consequential innovations of our lifetime and would transform the way we live and work.
“Whenever you have capital moving into an industry, you will have winners and losers. We saw that in the 90s with the dot com crash. The internet changed the world, but we still saw a crash. AI will also change the world, but it will have challenges and its pathway won’t be linear,” Mr Irvine said.
“At NAB, AI has become an integral part of how we operate. We are upskilling our workforce and harnessing its potential. We’ve deployed advanced virtual assistants that have improved customer satisfaction, reduced wait times and freed up our teams to focus on more complex customer needs. Our software engineers and data scientists are using AI tools to write code faster and with greater accuracy.”
Looking ahead, Mr Irvine emphasised that AI would continue to drive efficiency and productivity gains, while reaffirming that technology will complement - not replace - the human relationships that remain central to banking.
“AI will continue to transform the way we work and how well and fast we do it, streamlining processes, enhancing productivity and supporting our people to deliver better outcomes. While technology will never replace the importance of human relationships in banking, we will continue to unlock the benefits of AI safely and responsibly.”
Energy
On energy, Mr Irvine stressed the need for faster approvals for energy projects and significant investment in renewable projects and infrastructure.
“High energy costs are hurting households and holding back manufacturing,” Mr Irvine said.
“As a country, we need to do a much better job of getting energy to market, both renewable and natural gas, to help decarbonise the grid, get rid of coal and become the energy superpower we should be,” he said.
“We need huge investment into the grid, as well as faster and more approvals of renewable projects and gas projects. Project approvals are still too slow in this country.
“If we get the settings right, get more projects approved and more investment in the grid, Australia can be an energy superpower and still meet its net zero ambitions,” Mr Irvine said.
Topics
Economic & Market News
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