Oh sure, there always is some social disruption when something new and game changing came out. For example, when smart phones became popular, phone booths started disappearing, they are very hard to find now. I think people would look at having a robot the same as having a car, an expensive purchase they can use for a long time. But why should it be expensive? The only expensive part comes from trying to look and act like a human. We already have chatgpt and whatever the next iteration is. So you would pay $10 grand for a chatgpc that looks human and can walk? Why?
As for them taking jobs, you will not be able to make a robot that can do everything a human can for at least 100 years, imo. The physical part is very difficult, climbing a ladder, walking, running. Even harder is seeing a situation and deciding what needs to be done. It takes robot vision which is getting better but is not too good yet. To look at something, see a bolt is missing, look for and pick up the right bolt, and install the bolt, that takes a lot of brainpower that is not easily appreciated.
To look for and pick up and object takes more than cameras for eyes. The brain has to recognize the object which may be at different angles. That alone takes a lot of computing power. Then it has to manouver its arm into position and pick the object up. We aren't quite there yet except in some dedicated environments where everything is in the right place. And to grab something flying by in the air like a ball, that is way way more difficult. It has to calculate the speed, direction, the path its going to take, gravity effects on the flight of the ball, wind and so on. To catch it, it has to do all that and to calculate exactly where to put its hand and do it in time. It will years before we have that
We don't need that. What would you use a robot for? Going to the store and picking up groceries? They deliver for free. A tennis partner? Can't do it yet though it can throw balls at you. Cut the lawn? You need a mower and teach the machine to mow. Better to have a mower that is programmable. It can do some house keeping, we already have roomba.
What will people want a robot for once they realize its not going to look or act exactly like a human nor can it do many human things? Someone to talk to? That can work, we already have chatgpt as I keep pointing out
In factories, it will be an extention of a programmable machine. It will have additional capabilities like examining parts for flaws, operating a machine and so on that a human used to do. It might be built into the machine, be a part of it or be like a supervisor checking on the whole factory operation. It will take time since many things can not be automated or its too expensive.
Certain things will become cheaper right away. Computers are used now in trouble shooting cars, doctors use more and more diagnostic programs and equipment. AI is just another iteration of that