Who’s right about AI: economists or technologists? - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 创新经济

Who’s right about AI: economists or technologists?

Forecasting the impact of artificial intelligence has become fraught, with evangelists pitched against sceptics
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":7.84,"text":"It is rare for a central banking institution to model the economic impact of human extinction (spoiler alert: GDP goes to zero). But a startling chart depicting that scenario was shown in a recent research paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas."}],[{"start":25.79,"text":"Forecasting the likely impact of artificial intelligence on US economic growth, the researchers presented three scenarios. Their central forecast was that AI might boost the trend growth of US GDP per capita to 2.1 per cent for 10 years. “Not trivial but not earth shattering either,” the report’s authors, Mark Wynne and Lillian Derr, wrote."}],[{"start":50.97,"text":"But the bank also considered what might happen if AI achieved the technological singularity, when machine intelligence surpasses the human kind and becomes ever smarter. "}],[{"start":65.1,"text":"In a good case, that superintelligence could trigger a massive rise in GDP and end scarcity. In a bad one, it could lead to the rise of malevolent machines and end humanity. There was, the authors noted, little empirical evidence behind either of these extreme scenarios, although some economists have been exploring both possibilities."}],[{"start":90.22999999999999,"text":"Evidently, there is a wide spectrum of views among economists about AI. But the economic consensus is that it might be no more consequential than some other technological advances, such as electricity, the internal combustion engine and computers.  "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":109.11999999999999,"text":"It takes a massive technological jolt to shift an economy the size of the US above its growth trend line of just under 2 per cent a year. For more than a century, that trend has held pretty steady in spite of two world wars, the Depression and periodic global financial crises, not to mention myriad previous technological advances. "}],[{"start":133.35999999999999,"text":"Moreover, economists argue, the rapid diffusion of AI we see today will not automatically translate into productive adoption. Indeed, it may temporarily lead to a loss of productivity as jobs are shuffled and new ways of working are introduced — the so-called J-curve."}],[{"start":153.70999999999998,"text":"But AI evangelists hear such arguments with slack jaws. Many of them depict economists as a downbeat and conservative tribe, vainly trying to predict the future by looking in the rear-view mirror. The way they see it, automating brawn triggered the Industrial Revolution and automating the brain will lead to an even bigger jump in productivity. That should surely shift the trend line in a dramatic way."}],[{"start":183.85999999999999,"text":"Last week, the Stanford Digital Economy Lab hosted a seminar to debate the contrasting views of economists and technologists. The discussion was led by Tamay Besiroglu, co-founder of Mechanize, an AI start-up that wants to enable “the full automation of the economy”."}],[{"start":205.41,"text":"One way of thinking about AI, he said, was that it would enable us to inject significant new inputs into the economy by massively increasing the number of digital workers to tackle many more tasks. “AI effectively turns labour into a type of capital,” Besiroglu said. "}],[{"start":224.45,"text":"Another way in which AI might boost productivity is by generating and diffusing more useful ideas. In his great book The Enlightened Economy, the economic historian and recent Nobel laureate Joel Mokyr argued that the Industrial Revolution occurred in Britain when it did because of the rapid circulation and adoption of practical knowledge. The Dallas Fed paper acknowledged that AI could well accelerate discovery and innovation in unpredictable ways that would meaningfully contribute to higher living standards."}],[{"start":262.14,"text":"Although the differences between economists and technologists appear stark, Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, says they are not incompatible. “I think they both have a lot of truth to their positions. And there’s a way to reconcile them,” he told me."}],[{"start":282.78,"text":"After studying productivity gains from previous general-purpose technologies such as steam engines, electricity and IT, Brynjolfsson suggests the biggest economic impact often comes from investments in complementary areas, rather than from direct investments in these technologies themselves."}],[{"start":305.97999999999996,"text":"So, for example, it took a generation before redesigned factories were built to exploit the full benefits of electricity. He suggests the gains will arrive a lot quicker from “amazing” AI but they will still not be immediate. “These complementary investments are where the real action is. And they take time and are very complicated,” he says."}],[{"start":330.51,"text":"That suggests both economists and technologists may be partly right but precisely wrong. Productivity growth may eventually be far bigger than most economists currently forecast but far slower than many technologists predict."}],[{"start":357.22999999999996,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1762828962_5819.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

低增长已成为欧洲最大的金融稳定风险

欧洲最大的金融稳定风险已不再是银行,而是低增长本身。只有实现更强劲的增长,欧洲才能保持安全、繁荣与战略自主。
44分钟前

好莱坞导演罗伯•莱纳夫妇遇害,儿子尼克被捕

洛杉矶警方正在调查《摇滚万万岁》导演罗伯•莱纳遇害一案。莱纳生前除影坛成就外,也因长期投身民权事业而备受政界与娱乐圈人士称赞。
3小时前

“稳定币超级周期”为什么可能重塑银行业?

一些技术专家认为,未来五年内,稳定币支付系统的数量将激增至十万种以上。

一周展望:英国央行会在圣诞节前降息吗?

与此同时,投资者一致认为,欧洲央行本周将把基准利率维持在2%。而推迟发布的美国就业数据将揭示美国劳动力市场处于何种状态。

“布鲁塞尔效应”如何适得其反

曾被视为全球典范的欧盟立法机器,如今却在自身抱负的重压下步履蹒跚。

对冲基金涌入大宗商品,寻求新的回报来源

包括Balyasny、Jain Global和Qube在内的基金正扩张业务,以便能够直接交易相关金融市场。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×