Of course it's good for the economy - more productivity = less input for more output.
Of course in the short term it may not be good for some particular participants in the economy i.e. bricklayers, but they can be deployed elsewhere.
If things that could otherwise be automated were done manually just for the sake of jobs, we might as well do away with combine harvesters and all go and cut the wheat with nail-scissors. At least we'd be busy!
There are plenty of other jobs that will disappear or at least be diminished in the future, and many are white-collar; salespeople of various types (cars, real estate, travel), for example.
It's OK.