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Exploring AI’s Economic Impact

Artificial intelligence could boost global economic growth and restrain inflation by increasing productivity and creating new jobs.

06/15/2023
Robot arms in shipping facility.

Key Takeaways

AI has the potential to create more jobs than it replaces.

By enabling workers to offload time-consuming tasks, AI can drive labor productivity higher.

Rising productivity bolsters growth and tamps inflation — a promising prospect for the global economy.

Technology has always played a significant role in shaping the economy, with innovations driving economic growth and remaking industries. Each wave of tech innovation has left its mark.

As the world stands on the brink of an AI revolution, its potentially transformative impacts are generating immense interest.

How Has Technology Affected the Economy in the Past?

Annual U.S. growth in total factor productivity — a measure inclusive of innovation and technological change — averaged about 1.5% in the 1950s and 1960s. Except for a brief period after COVID-19 pandemic restrictions eased in 2021, it has since averaged about half that rate.

Massive government spending on highways, airports and other infrastructure helped fuel that mid-century boom. An expanding and increasingly educated workforce played a role, thanks to the GI Bill and evolution of the modern university system. Economists also credit changes in offices and production lines triggered by early automation and computers.

But corporate executives surveyed in 1957 about what accounted for boosts in labor productivity provided a resounding answer: air conditioning.1 They credited an innovation not usually associated with sophisticated technological advancement.

In 1950, few homes had central or room air conditioning. By 1993, 68% had acquired it, and 90% by 2013.2

Consider that without air conditioning, the tremendous growth of Sun Belt cities, such as Atlanta, Dallas, Houston and Phoenix, might never have happened. Even mundane technological changes can contribute to economic growth in unforeseen ways.

Now imagine the potential impact of AI, a technology that many argue is set to revolutionize society. Economists, market analysts, scientists and consultants believe AI will fuel productivity gains not witnessed for generations. That accelerated growth would help alleviate inflation and potential labor shortages across the global economy.

How Are Labor Productivity and Inflation Related?

At a basic level, labor productivity measures a worker’s output relative to the labor necessary to generate it. Productivity increases when workers generate more output with the same effort. And when productivity increases, economic growth expands and living standards improve.

Next, consider the knock-on effects of rising productivity on inflation. When productivity increases, the amount of goods or services workers produce rises compared to the costs. As production rises, the overall supply of goods increases. At the same time, the costs of producing each additional product unit or service drop.3

More output and lower production costs place downward pressure on the prices of goods and services. When that happens — violà — inflation falls.

How AI Could Boost Labor Productivity

New research from ChatGPT creator Open AI, OpenResearch and the University of Pennsylvania concludes that AI will change most jobs somehow.4 Its potential to increase workers’ capacity strongly argues for rising productivity in coming years.

Goldman Sachs estimates that AI will boost annual U.S. labor productivity by 1.5 percentage points in the first decade after its widespread adoption.5 That would mark the most significant increase in a quarter century.

Meanwhile, 81% of U.S. businesses now employ the technology, up a third in just five years.6 This includes using AI-powered programs such as Grammarly, a tool designed to help ensure content readability. But such programs pale compared to the potential of ChatGPT, which can produce several types of original content instead of merely editing existing text.

A 30-fold increase in AI patent filings between 2015 and 2021 indicates businesses will encounter additional ways to employ AI in coming years.7 Of course, how they use and achieve AI’s productivity potential will vary from industry to industry and company to company.

Automating all or a portion of our daily routines will account for some gains. Consultant McKinsey & Co. estimates AI could automate a quarter of all work activities by 2030. In coming decades, 60% of the 800 occupations tracked by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics could have at least a third of their activities automated.8

For example, Microsoft’s new CoPilot AI “promises to unlock productivity” by summarizing long email threads or drafting suggested email responses. It may also automate scheduling meetings and notetaking while enhancing other Office suite programs to make work more efficient. Similarly, Google plans AI enhancements to its Cloud and Workspace apps.

AI Could Displace Jobs, but New Roles Will Emerge

Naturally, the automation opportunities AI presents have spurred fears of widespread job displacement or elimination. This concern isn’t unfounded: According to one estimate, the retail sector could see a third of its jobs displaced by 2030.9

But history has shown that for all the jobs lost to technological advancement — steam engine mechanics, toll booth operators and switchboard operators, to name a few — others will emerge.

One study found that 60% of today’s workers occupy jobs that didn’t exist in 1940. Since then, 85% of employment growth has consisted of new jobs that technological innovation created.10

Boston Consulting Group and Faethm, a firm specializing in AI and analytics, project that one additional job will surface for every six jobs AI automate or augment. Their study predicts that new roles developing, implementing and running new AI programs will appear in nearly five dozen occupations.11

For instance, companies have already begun hiring “prompt engineers” to communicate effectively with large-language AI systems.12 ZipRecruiter reports that “hundreds” of additional job postings mentioning AI appear monthly. Figure 1 looks at the demand for AI labor across industries.

Figure 1 | AI Labor Demand Is Increasing

AI Labor Demand Is Increasing.

Source: Lightcast, 2022 | Chart: 2023 AI Index Report, Stanford University.

Workers in existing roles can undertake higher-value tasks while AI manages more tedious, ordinary duties. These include certain clerical, administrative, computational and manual duties in various blue- and white-collar positions.

Aiding the transition — robocolleagues that consulting firm Gartner Inc. expects to interact with 100 million workers by 2026.13

AI Could Help Address Global Labor Shortages

Far from causing widespread job losses, AI may help fill the gap from approaching global labor shortages created by demographic shifts and other variables. The aging of the Baby Boom generation and uncertainty about future immigration policies present economic challenges. The U.S., Japan and many other developed economies confront ever-shrinking working-age populations.

This slowing, or negative, population growth resulting in fewer workers relative to the non-working-age population is known as a “demographic burden.” But AI offers societies and economies another way to help shoulder this burden. Specifically:

  • In the U.S., the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and Faethm foresee a workforce shortfall of 0.9-4.4% by 2030. Widespread AI adoption between now and then could close that gap. Low AI adoption, on the other hand, would leave a deficit of 12.5 million jobs. See Figure 2.

  • The BCG/Faethem study also forecasted occupations with the highest number of job surpluses and shortfalls due to AI adoption. For example, researchers believe AI will create a surplus of information and record clerks. At the same time, they project a shortfall of qualified workers to fill computer occupations.

  • In a best-case scenario, Goldman Sachs predicts AI-facilitated robots could fill at least 48% of a projected U.S. manufacturing labor shortage by 2030. Similarly, AI-enabled productivity gains could narrow an expected gap in care for older people by as much as 53% by 2035.14

Figure 2 | Projected U.S. Worker Surpluses and Shortfalls in 2030

Projected U.S. Worker Surpluses and Shortfalls in 2030.

Source: Faethm, BCG analysis.

AI May Boost Global GDP by Trillions

The productivity improvement AI drives should directly boost economic growth.

During the next decade, Goldman expects AI to increase global gross domestic product (GDP) by 7%, equaling about $7 trillion. Bank of America is more optimistic. It estimates a potential $15.7 trillion benefit.15

AI could expand the economy profoundly in the U.S, doubling annual GDP growth potential to 3%.

This elevated growth could include varied impacts:

  • A global AI market — software, hardware and services — reaching $900 billion by 2026 and $2 trillion by 2030.16

  • Soaring private investment, which doubled to $94 billion in 2021 from just a year earlier.

  • Health care spending savings of up to $360 billion annually in the next five years.17

  • Consumer spending via chatbots reaching $142 billion as early as 2024.18

  • Declining costs for AI technology and training:

    • Median prices for robotic arms have declined 46% in the past five years.

    • Training costs for image classification systems have dropped 64% in the past five years, while training times have declined by 94%.

AI’s Productivity Jump Offers Hope in Post-Pandemic World

AI could boost productivity in a manner unmatched in recent memory. Its accruing economic benefits may relieve a world whipsawed by the worst pandemic in a century and surging inflation afterward. Longer term, it could help developed economies avoid the worst economic effects of aging populations.

More than that, AI’s inevitable assimilation into daily life might nudge society nearer to the prophecy that legendary economist John Maynard Keynes outlined in his famous 1930 essay, “Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren.”

Keynes envisioned a world in which technology eventually rid humans of unnecessary work, setting them free for more noble pursuits:

We shall once more value ends above means and prefer the good to the useful. We shall honor those who can teach us how to pluck the hour and the day virtuously and well, the delightful people who are capable of taking direct enjoyment in things, the lilies of the field who toil not, neither do they spin.
John Maynard Keynes

Keynes, of course, wrote these words in an office with no air conditioning, but his intelligence was anything but artificial.

Authors
Rob Brookby
Rob Brookby

Vice President

Senior Portfolio Manager

David Cross, CFA
David Cross, CFA

Portfolio Manager

Senior Investment Analyst

Nalin Yogasundram
Nalin Yogasundram

Vice President

Portfolio Manager

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Robert J. Gordon, The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living Since the Civil War, (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016).

Gordon, 2016.

David McMillan, “Inflation: There’s a Vital Way to Reduce It That Everyone Overlooks — Raise Productivity,” World Economic Forum, June 9, 2022.

Tyna Eloundou, Sam Manning, Pamela Mishkin, and Daniel Rock, “GPTs Are GPTs: An Early Look at the Labor Market Impact Potential of Large Language Models,” arXiv, Cornell University, March 23, 2023.

James Pethokoukis, “Why Generative AI Could Have a Huge Impact on Economic Growth and Productivity,” American Enterprise Institute, March 27, 2023.

Fortune Business Insights, “Artificial Intelligence Market 2023-2030,” April 2023.

Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, The AI Index Report: Measuring Trends in Artificial Intelligence, March 16, 2022.

Lisa Bannon, “AI in the Workplace Is Already Here. The First Battleground? Call Centers,” Wall Street Journal, February 18, 2023.

Joanna Partridge, Phillip Inman, and Alex Lawson, et al., “From Retail to Transport: How AI Is Changing Every Corner of the Economy,” Guardian, February 18, 2023.

Goldman Sachs, “Generative AI Could Raise Global GDP by 7%,” April 5, 2023.

Rainer Strack, Miguel Carrasco, and Philipp Kolo, et al., “The Future of Jobs in the Era of AI,” Boston Consulting Group, March 18, 2021.

Jackie Snow, “Chat GPT Can Give Great Answers. But Only If You Know How to Ask the Right Question,” Wall Street Journal, April 12, 2023.

Gartner On-Demand Webinar, “Beyond the Hype: Enterprise Impact of ChatGPT and Generative AI,” 2023.

Goldman Sachs, “Humanoid Robots: Sooner Than You Might Think,” November 15, 2022.

Phil Rosen, “Artificial Intelligence Is on the Brink of an ‘iPhone Moment’ and can boost the world economy by $15.7 Trillion in 7 Years, Bank of America Says,” Business Insider, March 1, 2023.

Fortune Business Insights, 2023.

Nikhil Sahni, George Stein, Rodney Zemmel, and David M. Cutler, “The Potential Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Healthcare Spending,” National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 30857, January 2023.

GetSmarter, “The Future of AI: 5 Industries That Will Be Most Affected,” March 9, 2022.

References to specific securities are for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended as recommendations to purchase or sell securities. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and, along with other portfolio data, are subject to change without notice.

The opinions expressed are those of American Century Investments (or the portfolio manager) and are no guarantee of the future performance of any American Century Investments' portfolio. This material has been prepared for educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide, and should not be relied upon for, investment, accounting, legal or tax advice.