"There's 330,000 people that work for GE and none of them had a productive day yesterday, none of them had a completely productive day. So my own belief is that when it comes to digital tools and things like that, that first part of the revolution, is going to be to make your existing workforce productive," Immelt said during a talk at the Viva Tech conference in Paris.



"I think this notion that we are all going to be in a room full of robots in five years … and that everything is going to be automated, it's just BS. It's not the way the world is going to work."



Companies should look to make their workers more productive through new technological tools, Immelt said.



Immelt did not mince his words, saying that those who have warned about such a short term hit to jobs have no experience of actually working in factory environments.



"Most of the people that think that work is totally going to be displaced are people that have never done work, I think if you've actually run a factory … you know most of this is just bulls--t. And so, I would call myself more a realist than an optimist," Immelt said.



Fierce debate has been raging recently about the extent to which jobs will be automated, and what impact this could have on jobs and society. Even if the short-term outlook is not that bad, several stories have pointed towards a longer-term impact.

Around a third of jobs in the U.K. could be affected by artificial intelligence and automation, while this figure rises to 38 percent in the U.S. by the 2030s, according to a report by accountancy firm PWC released in March.