Every time someone presents a humanoid robot prototype, one of the first comments is almost always something to the effect of "it's just a robot powered by a human in a VR headset!" But while this is normally presented as a "gotcha!" the concept is actually extremely powerful, and could solve a whole host of problems while creating new jobs at scale.
Here in the US, for example, copious amounts of digital ink has been spilled about the issues many young men are having gaining and keeping employment. Traditionally "male" jobs have been outsourced, and for reasons far too complicated to enumerate here, men have not gone to work in female-coded fields. So what is left is a swathe of the population left adrift and angry. But if there's anything that is a common thread among many of them, it's that many of them are tech-savvy and especially interested in video games. Hence, a solution.
These new robots, powered by humans, can create jobs that can be done anywhere -- a huge boon for people in rural areas with limited job opportunities. The user could power a robot delivery vehicle, for instance -- there are already food delivery robots in LA, and they could be scaled to any dense urban area. The robots could be programmed to only go a certain speed and stay on sidewalks (unlike IRL delivery drivers in NYC) and if a robot gets hit by a bus, it's a little bit of a bummer, but obviously nowhere near as awful as a human getting hit.
Robots can clean houses and office buildings as well -- humans who had those jobs can now work from a comfy chair in a home or office space, as opposed to putting stress and strain on their actual bodies. Robots can pick shelves in warehouses and pack and load trucks, all powered by people.
This model can even be the full realization of gig work -- a college student with a few hours in between classes can pop on a headset and make some deliveries and a few extra bucks. The current labor shortage we face will be solved because these tasks can be done by someone anywhere in the world, allowing people in underserved countries to earn a living and rise into the middle class.
We are a ways off from this becoming a reality, but it could be here sooner than you think. And as weird as it might be at first, eventually we'll all be working alongside human powered robots.