A key question is whether AI will drive global productivity or if its benefits will be concentrated in a few leading nations. We see three potential scenarios:
1. Widely diffused benefits: AI could lift productivity in many countries leading to a new wave of worldwide growth. This would help aging societies mitigate labour shortages and allow developing economies to leapfrog stages of development.
2. Concentrated benefit: The advantages of AI might accrue primarily to a few leading nations, particularly the US and China. These countries are at the forefront of AI research and deployment, accounting for the majority of AI startup funding, top talent, and research output.
3. Strategic disruption: The country that 'wins' the AI race, possibly by achieving Advanced General Intelligence (AGI) first, might use this as a strategic resource, sharing intellectual property only with its allies.
The most likely outcome is that AI will become a general-purpose technology with an uneven rollout. The US and China might be the first to adopt AI at scale, but other nations would benefit with a time lag or in specific areas.
Another critical factor is whether technology and investment move in tandem. If technology advances faster than investment, it could create a major supply shock by disrupting the labour market. At the same time, however, it may deliver major productivity gains in certain tech-oriented sectors.
However, if technological advancements lag investment, the economy has more time to adapt and develop new applications for emerging technology. This would allow continued productive employment across the labour market.
The Goldilocks outcome is one where technology and investments advance together.
AI holds the promise of significantly boosting productivity, and the read-through effects on economic growth and government debt levels could be profound. But its impact will vary across regions and sectors. The strategic adoption and integration of AI will determine which countries and industries reap the most benefits.
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