Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Timon's avatar

One thing that is often forgotten in this debate is that the Age of AI could potentially differ from previous technological advancements, in the sense that AI can outperfrom humans in all domains. Tractors needed humans to drive them and Software needs developers, but with the arriving of AGI and robotics the only thing left for humans to win on is ideas and consciousness, and this is something currently only founders and the top percents excel at. Also there will be a gap where the average human will never be able to learn enough to surpass future AI. But i hope the future will prove me wrong, or we can use that AI superiority to live a life without mandatory work.

Scenarica's avatar

The aggregate economics here is solid and the lump-of-labor rebuttal is correct as far as it goes. every previous technological revolution did create more jobs than it destroyed. The pie got bigger. The doomers are wrong about the endpoint. But theres a gap in this piece large enough to drive policy through, and its the gap that will actually determine what happens.

The gap is time.

Every historical example cited here played out over 20-50 years. Agriculture going from 33% of employment to under 2% took most of a century. Manufacturing decline took four decades. Workers displaced by those transitions had time, their children had time, communities restructured slowly enough that the economy absorbed the shock across generations.

AI is compressing that timeline from decades to years and I dont think anyone has really grappled with what that means practically. The BLS Displaced Workers Survey from January 2024 tells you what actually happens to people who lose jobs to structural shifts right now: 65.5% of long-tenured displaced workers found new employment. 16.1% still unemployed. 18.2% left the workforce entirely. For workers over 55 the reemployment rate was 55.3%. over 65 it was 34.4%. And these arent even AI-specific numbers yet, this is just the baseline for how well the labour market absorbs displacement under normal conditions.

The Jevons Paradox argument is elegant but it operates on a 10-20 year timescale. Political economy operates on a 2-4 year electoral cycle. if a million white-collar workers lose their jobs in 2027 and the replacement jobs dont materialise until 2032, the economic thesis gets vindicated and the political damage is already done. Regulation and protectionist policy will arrive long before Jevons has time to work.

Heres the thing that really gets me though. The US currently spends 0.1% of GDP on active labour market policies for displaced workers. OECD average is 0.6%. Thats a sixfold gap in transition infrastructure at precisely the moment when transition speed is about to accelerate by an order of magnitude. The economic argument for AI creating jobs requires a retraining and redeployment infrastructure that doesnt exist and this piece would be even stronger if it addressed that directly, because the optimistic case actually depends on it.

The doomers are wrong about the destination. The optimists are wrong about the journey. What actually happens depends on whether retraining infrastructure scales fast enough to keep the transition from becoming a political crisis before the new jobs arrive. right now nothing in the policy pipeline suggests it will.

22 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?