Imagine a computer program that does not just execute commands, but plans, decides and acts on its own to achieve a goal. That is an autonomous artificial intelligence agent, and in 2026 it has become one of the most transformative β and debated β technologies on the global stage.
By the end of 2026, more than 40% of large companies are expected to use AI agents in at least one critical business process, according to industry consultants.
What exactly are autonomous agents?
Unlike traditional virtual assistants, which answer questions or perform simple tasks, an autonomous agent can break down a complex problem into steps, search for information across multiple sources, make intermediate decisions and adjust its behavior based on outcomes. For example, in logistics, an agent can manage an entire supply chain: detect delays, renegotiate routes with carriers and request inventory replenishment without human intervention.

AI Agent
An artificial intelligence system designed to perceive its environment, reason and execute actions autonomously to achieve a specific goal, without constant human supervision.
Impact on employment and productivity
The mass adoption of these agents is generating a dual effect. On one hand, companies in sectors such as banking, logistics and customer service report productivity gains of up to 30% in repetitive tasks. On the other, unions and international organizations warn about the destruction of administrative and service jobs, especially those involving standardized processes. The International Labour Organization has pointed out that without active reskilling policies, this transition could increase inequality.
Regulation and governance: the great challenge
One of the most intense debates in 2026 revolves around who is responsible when an autonomous agent makes a mistake. The company that deployed it? The developer? The system itself? The European Union, a pioneer in AI regulation, is working on a specific directive for autonomous agents that requires full traceability of decisions and a human 'emergency brake'. China, meanwhile, has taken a more permissive approach, prioritizing innovation and rapid deployment in sectors such as manufacturing and e-commerce.

What does this mean for the world?
The proliferation of autonomous AI agents is not a future promise: it is a reality already reshaping the global economy. From optimizing power grids to managing health crises, their potential is immense. But so are the risks: concentration of power in large tech corporations, loss of human control over critical decisions, and a digital divide that could leave behind countries without infrastructure or training. The path chosen now β between prudent regulation and unfettered innovation β will define whether this technology becomes a tool for shared progress or a driver of new inequalities.