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Typically, accelerating economic growth leads to higher inflation expectations and bond yields. The current trend of falling break-evens alongside positive growth data is unusual. The residual factor explaining this divergence is a market-wide bet that AI will unleash a massive, disinflationary productivity wave.
According to analyst Samuel Hammond, AI's first wave will create a "software singularity" that feels more disinflationary than hyper-growth. While knowledge work is automated, real-world bottlenecks like infrastructure and regulation will limit GDP growth, with gains captured as consumer surplus.
A strong argument suggests that robust economic spending combined with weak labor growth points to higher productivity, potentially from AI. Because productivity gains are disinflationary over the long term, this could give the Fed justification to lower interest rates now without worrying as much about current inflation levels.
While economic principles suggest AGI will be hugely deflationary, Sam Altman points out a paradox. The massive, urgent investment required to build AI compute could drive a strange, inflationary period where capital is extremely valuable, creating profound uncertainty about interest rates.
For 2026, massive capital expenditure on AI infrastructure like data centers and semiconductors will fuel economic demand and inflation. The widely expected productivity gains that lower inflation are a supply-side effect that will take several years to materialize.
While AI is expected to be disinflationary long-term, its immediate impact could be inflationary. The massive capital expenditure required to build AI infrastructure will significantly increase demand in a fully employed economy before the productivity benefits are realized.
Like past technological leaps, AI's economic impact will be sequenced. Expect immediate real income gains as new products emerge. The broader disinflationary effects from productivity improvements will only materialize later, after businesses fully re-engineer their operations.
In a high-impact AI scenario, massive productivity growth leads to gluts of goods and services. This causes prices to collapse, creating massive deflation. This deflation acts as a universal pay raise, dramatically increasing everyone's real wealth and purchasing power.
The bond market is unconcerned by massive AI capital expenditure from tech giants, viewing them as high-quality credits with immense capacity for debt. In contrast, the equity market is highly volatile, punishing even minor deviations from expected growth, highlighting a fundamental difference in risk assessment between debt and equity investors.
As AI gets exponentially smarter, it will solve major problems in power, chip efficiency, and labor, driving down costs across the economy. This extreme efficiency creates a powerful deflationary force, which is a greater long-term macroeconomic risk than the current AI investment bubble popping.
A rapid, broad adoption of AI could significantly boost productivity, leading to faster real GDP growth while simultaneously causing disinflation. This supply-side-driven scenario would present a puzzle for the Fed, potentially allowing it to lower interest rates to normalize policy even amid a strong economy.